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Obama offers Karzai additional aid after killer landslide
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 04, 2014


Afghan rescuers search for survivors trapped under the mud in Argo district of Badakhshan province on May 3, 2014 after a massive landslide May 2 buried a village. Rescuers searched in vain for survivors May 3 after a landslide buried an Afghan village, killing 350 people and leaving thousands of others feared dead amid warnings that more earth could sweep down the hillside. Local people made desperate efforts to find victims trapped under a massive river of mud that engulfed Aab Bareek village in Badakhshan province, where little sign remained of hundreds of destroyed homes. Photo courtesy AFP.

President Barack Obama offered his Afghan counterpart Hamid Karzai additional US assistance Sunday to relief efforts after a landslide killed hundreds of people in northern Afghanistan.

Much of Aab Bareek village in Badakhshan province was swallowed on Friday by a fast-moving tide of mud and rock that swept down the hillside and left almost no trace of hundreds of homes.

At least 300 were killed, and officials warned the death toll could rise by hundreds more. A total of 700 families were left homeless in the mountains.

During a phone call between the two presidents, Obama "affirmed the support of the American people as the Afghans respond to this tragedy and offered additional US assistance to the ongoing relief efforts," a White House statement said.

He also expressed his condolences for the "extensive" loss of life.

And addressing last month's election, with a run-off vote between frontrunner Abdullah Abdullah and ex-World Bank economist Ashraf Ghani due June 7, Obama "reaffirmed that the United States supports a sovereign, stable, unified and democratic Afghanistan."

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