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Relatives of avalanche victims return after conducting a search for the victims in Panjshir.
Relatives of avalanche victims return after conducting a search for the victims in Panjshir. Photograph: Omar Sobhani/Reuters
Relatives of avalanche victims return after conducting a search for the victims in Panjshir. Photograph: Omar Sobhani/Reuters

Afghanistan avalanches: more than 180 dead

This article is more than 9 years old

Officials warned of an imminent humanitarian emergency in areas most severely hit by the heavy snow

The death toll in some of the worst avalanches in Afghanistan for 30 years has risen to more than 180 people, with heavy snow set to last for two more days.

Officials warned of an imminent humanitarian emergency in areas most severely hit by the bad weather, with snow sweeping through villages and blocking off roads.

“We haven’t seen this much snow, or this many avalanches, for 30 years,” said Abdul Rahman Kabiri, acting governor of the mountainous province of Panjshir, north of Kabul, where 186 people were killed and more than 100 injured in avalanches.

Despite bringing misery to so many people, the snow is vital for Afghanistan, where much of the rural population dependent on agriculture relies on snow melting in the mountains to sustain crops in the spring and summer. An unusually dry winter had led to fears of drought.

Farming drives the troubled Afghan economy, with about three quarters of the people living in rural areas, the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation estimated in 2004.

Irrigation is not extensive in Afghanistan, most of which is semi-arid, and aid efforts over the past decade or more have focused on trying to extend it, with mixed results.

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