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Mountain villages plunged into grief by Morocco quake

 As we negotiated the final corner of the winding road and pulled up in the Mo­roccan moun­tain village of Moulay Brahim, it was immediately obvious we’d arrived in a community that had been plunged into grief by Friday night’s deadly earthquake.

An elderly women staggered towards us, wailing, tears falling down her face, holding her head in her hands.

A few metres away, a group of young men were sobbing. They’d just discovered their friend was among the dead.

“There have been so many deaths today,” one of the men told us.

“And our friend, he was crushed. We buried him today and he was so young.”

Another man, Mohamed – who is helping to organise this make­shift response – revealed that 16 people had already been buried in this village alone, having been recovered from the rubble on Saturday. Another two victims will be laid to rest on Sunday.

“We’ve been working every min­ute since it happened. Non-stop since then,” he said. “There are only about 10 people working here and we’re trying to find people in the buildings. It’s desperate.”

Some hope was delivered a few moments later, as members of the Red Crescent arrived.

But this is a disaster that needs a considerably bigger and co-ordi­nated response.

“We have nothing here,” said Mohamed. “And we need every­thing. Food, medication, shelter.”

This scene of destruction and despair is being played out across many parts of the High Atlas Mountains.

Our 90-minute zigzag drive from Marrakesh up to the remote mountainside was elongated by boulders and rocks that lined the route and obscured our path.

Broken and blocked roads have been seriously hampering the rescue effort. Teams have been fanning out from the main cities – notably Marrakesh – to try to reach the very worst-affected areas in the hope of pulling survivors from the rubble.

—BBC

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