A significant 5.6 magnitude earthquake jolted the Afghanistan-Tajikistan frontier on Wednesday afternoon, according to the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences. Alternative readings placed it between 5.4 and 5.7, underscoring the intensity felt at 4:42 PM local time. The deep-seated tremor, originating 90.2 km underground at coordinates 36.93°N, 71.61°E, triggered widespread alarm.
Panic ensued as buildings swayed in affected areas, with vibrations extending to multiple Pakistani cities including Peshawar, Swat, Chitral, and the capital Islamabad. Residents poured into streets, sharing accounts of furniture toppling and windows rattling. So far, officials report no deaths or structural collapses, a fortunate outcome given the terrain’s vulnerability.
Just five days prior, on February 20, a 5.8 magnitude event shook Kabul and Panjshir province, its epicenter 38 km northwest of Bazarak at 90 km depth, per USGS data. Afghanistan endures as a hotspot for seismic devastation. The catastrophic 6.3 quake of October 7, 2023, followed by aftershocks, resulted in over 4,000 fatalities. A 6.0 tremor near Paktika in late August 2024 claimed 2,000+ lives.
Seismologists attribute this pattern to the collision of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates, fueling the Hindu Kush’s volatility. While current damage assessments are ongoing, international aid organizations are mobilizing. Communities in the cross-border zone, already strained by conflict and hardship, now face nature’s unpredictable fury. Vigilance against aftershocks is paramount as recovery protocols activate.