ISLAMABAD - Rescue efforts are in progress after a 5.8-magnitude earthquake jolted parts of Pakistan, leaving 21 people killed and over 320 injured, police said.

The worst-affected area was Mirpur district of the Pakistan-controlled Kashmir where 20 people lost their lives and over 300 others wounded while one woman was killed and 20 others injured in neighboring Jhelum district of the country’s eastern Punjab province, police officers of the respective districts told local media.

Deputy Inspector General of Police in Mirpur district of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir Sardar Gulfaraz said that at least eight people died in the city area while 12 others including two children lost lives in Jatlan, a town in Mirpur district. Gulfaraz feared that the death toll might further rise as scores of others have been buried under the debris in the town.

The Inter-Services Public Relations, the media wing of Pakistan army, said that an immediate rescue operation in aid of civil administration for victims of the earthquake has been started as army troops with aviation and medical support teams reached the affected areas.

Chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) Lt. General Muhammad Afzal said that rescue teams equipped with special gadgets to trace trapped people under the debris have reached the affected areas and started work.

The chairman told a press conference in Islamabad that food items, medicines, quilts, tents and generators have been sent to the affected areas, adding that they are preparing to protect the displaced people from the coming rain spell.

Rescue teams are facing severe challenges to reach Jatlan and shift bodies and injured to hospitals because three road link to the town have been disconnected due to severe damages.

Minister for Youth and Culture of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir Muhammad Saeed told Xinhua that serious damages have done to the infrastructure, communication network and electricity supply, which has disrupted daily life in the district.

Several buildings have been collapsed in Jatlan town, three bridges linking the town with other areas suffered serious cracks and at least two-km long road skidded into a canal, said the minister, adding that several vehicles moving at the road adjacent to a canal fell and drowned into the canal.

An eyewitness from Mirpur named Atiq-ur-Rehman told Xinhua that big cracks have appeared at roads in the district, which have disrupted traffic flow.

Dozens of houses and shops have been completely collapsed while hundreds of others suffered damages in the district, reported local media, adding that a hostel building of a medical college also collapsed in Mirpur and killed one student when he jumped from the roof of the trembling building.

Several villages inundated after a bank of the canal was broken, but authorities stopped water supply to the canal and moved villagers to safe places.

Pakistan’s Water and Power Development Authority (WAPDA) announced that all the turbines of the Hydropower Station Mangla established at the River Jhelum near Mirpur were closed after the earthquake. However, WAPDA added that the power station and the water reservoir remained safe in the earthquake.

Deputy Commissioner of Mirpur Raja Qaisar said that a state of emergency has been declared in the area with an appeal to the public to be calm and offer help to affected people.(FA)

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