Kabul, Afghanistan: Up to 255 people were killed and hundreds more are wounded after a magnitude 6.1 earthquake hit eastern Afghanistan Wednesday, according to state-run news agency Bakhtar, PTI reported. Speaking to reporters, a local government official said that the death toll may rise as several people are seriously injured.
The earthquake hit at 1:24 a.m. about 46 kilometers (28.5 miles) southwest of the city of Khost, which lies close to the country's border with Pakistan, according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS).
The European Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) asserted that people in Pakistan and India also felt tremors.
Disturbing pictures floating on social media showed destroyed stone houses, people being taken on stretchers, rubble and ruined homes in Paktika province near the Pakistan border.
Taking to Twitter, government spokesman Bilal Karimi said,"Unfortunately, last night there was a severe earthquake in four districts of Paktika province, which killed and injured hundreds of our countrymen and destroyed dozens of houses."
"We urge all aid agencies to send teams to the area immediately to prevent further catastrophe", he added.
Mountainous Afghanistan and the larger region of South Asia, where the Indian tectonic plate collides with the Eurasian plate to the north, has long been vulnerable to devastating earthquakes.
In 2015, a major earthquake that struck the country's northeast killed over 200 people in Afghanistan and neighboring northern Pakistan. A similar 6.1 earthquake in 2002 killed about 1,000 people in northern Afghanistan. And in 1998, a 6.1-magnitude earthquake and subsequent tremors in Afghanistan's remote northeast killed at least 4,500 people.