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When stones fell from the sky: The night an Afghan village was destroyed

As you entered their small village, three men sat on a traditional woven bed, &nbsp, a few meters away from the piles of stones that were once the first homes.

Mehboob, Hayat’s cousin, was one of them.

My 13-year-old son Nasib Ullah was sleeping next to me when the earthquake occurred. I awoke, got out of bed, and began looking for the torch. The room suddenly shifted from the falling rocks. The 36-year-old explained that when I attempted to reach my son, the wall and floor slid down and he was unable to catch him.

It was worse than the judgment’s day, the author claimed.

You couldn’t see anything, and we couldn’t see each other because houses collapsed and boulders from a mountain came crumbling down.

He explained that everyone was hurt. Some people had broken legs and ribs.

We traveled to the farmland below in the dark, where it was safer from the boulders, with our still-born children.

Children’s clothing was left on the ground following the earthquake [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

He said he had more than 250 tremors that night, aftershocks that had lasted for weeks after the earthquake, and that they had left behind.

He made an effort to find his loved ones when the sun set. He continued, “But my body didn’t want to work.”

The rest of my son’s body had vanished under the rubble, but I could see his foot.

Aisha, his 10-year-old daughter, was also killed.

He claimed that this was his life’s worst experience.

The bodies were recovered by villagers and volunteers in two days.

Rahmat Gul, Hayat’s brother, immediately ran to Parwan province, about 300 kilometers away, to find his brother’s message telling him that the entire village was gone.

The surviving villagers asked him to blanket Mehboob’s dead son when he finally arrived in Aurak Dandila.

As Mehboob sat next to him and gazed over the farmland in the valley below, Rahmat Gul explained, “Mehboob asked me to show him his son’s face, but I was unable to do it.”

Hayat Khan, 55, lost four members of his family during the magnitude 6.0 earthquake [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]
[Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera] Hayat Khan lost four of his family members in the earthquake.

Hayat began pacing as she stood up near her.

He said, “God has taken my sons from me, and I now feel like I have also left this world.”

A small cornfield in Aurak Dandila has turned into a graveyard. Hayat said, “Here is where we buried our loved ones.” Stones are used to mark the graves.

He recalls how he had urged Abdul Haq to remain in the village. He lost his life the following day because everything was gone.

Hayat now declares, “There is nothing left to live for here.”

How do I keep living here? He inquired, pointing to the remains of what was once his home.

How can anyone live in this village when the stones are coming from above?

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At least 47 killed in Nepal as heavy rains trigger landslides, flash floods

At least 47 people have died in Nepal as a result of landslides and flash floods caused by heavy rains, blocking roads and eradicating bridges.

According to Kalidas Dhauboji, a spokesperson for the Armed Police Force, 35 people were killed in two separate landslides in the Ilam district of east-bordering India on Sunday.

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He added that as severe downpours quashed the Himalayan nation’s eastern and central regions, nine people had been missing as a result of the floods that had been washed away since Friday and three others had died as a result of lightning strikes elsewhere in Nepal.

According to Shanti Mahat, a spokesperson for the Nepalese National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Authority, “Rescue efforts are being made for the missing persons.”

In response to the government’s struggle with the crisis, the Ministry of Home Affairs has designated Monday and Tuesday as national holidays. This exempts emergency services and disaster response teams.

Rameshwar Dangal, a spokesperson for the government, cited forecasts for heavy rains as justification for the unusual measure.

More than a dozen districts have been placed on red alert as a result of the meteorological authorities’ report, according to The Kathmandu Post newspaper.

Major population centers are covered by the alert, which includes parts of Kathmandu’s capital, with the provinces of Bagmati, Gandaki, Lumbini, and Madhesh provinces expected to experience the most rain through Monday morning.

All major routes into Kathmandu have been severely damaged by landslides that have caused extensive damage to the transport infrastructure.

The BP Highway linking the eastern regions is buried under debris, while the Araniko Highway, which connects Kathmandu to China’s border, is blocked after several road collapses.

Despite having some delays, the aviation authorities continued to suspend domestic flights on Saturday despite poor visibility.

International flights are operating normally, according to Rinji Sherpa, a spokesperson for the airport in Kathmandu, “but domestic flights are largely disrupted.”

As thousands of people return from their homes following Nepal’s Dashain celebrations, the country’s most significant religious holiday, the crisis has been compounded by its timing. People visited their families in their native villages on Thursday, which marked the two-week festival’s main day.

In southeast Nepal, where water levels have increased more than twice their normal volume, is of particular concern.

Authorities are considering preventing heavy vehicles from crossing the Koshi Barrage, but local official Dharmendra Kumar Mishra confirmed that all 56 sluice gates have been opened, compared to the standard 10 to 12.

In India’s Bihar state, the river frequently causes devastating flooding during the monsoons.

At least seven people were killed in the eastern Indian hill region of Darjeeling in West Bengal state as a result of landslides caused by heavy rain, according to local media reports.

“Seven dead bodies have already been found among the wreckage,” the statement read. More people are known, according to our knowledge. According to the Reuters news agency, work is also being done to retrieve their bodies, according to Darjeeling district police official Abhishek Roy on Sunday.

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To pique her most frightened curiosity, a young woman kills a random stranger in order to satisfy her obsession with true crime stories.

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