![]() “They have nothing and the people are starving,” he said. Ordinary citizens were also helping, like Brahim Daldali, 36, from Marrakech, who was using a motorbike to distribute food, water, clothes and blankets donated by friends and strangers. Many villagers have had no power or telephone network since the earthquake struck and have had to rescue loved ones and pull out dead bodies buried from under their crushed homes without any assistance. Hopes of finding survivors were fading, not least because many traditional mud brick houses that are common in the High Atlas crumbled to earthen rubble without leaving air pockets. “There are some villages that still have the dead buried under the rubble.” “The authorities are focusing on the bigger communities and not the remote villages that are worst affected,” he said. Hamid Ait Bouyali, 40, was also camping on the roadside. We need tents,” he said, criticizing the government’s relief efforts. ![]() “The villages of the valley have been forgotten. He said the group had received food and blankets from people driving by but nothing from the state. Mehdi Ait Bouyali, 24, was camping along the Tizi n’Test road, which connects remote valleys to the historic city of Marrakech, with a few other survivors who had also fled their destroyed villages. The situation was most desperate for people in remote areas cut off by landslides triggered by the earthquake that blocked access roads, while in accessible locations relief efforts were stepping up with tent camps and distribution of food and water. Rescuers from Spain, Britain and Qatar were helping Morocco’s search teams, while Italy, Belgium, France and Germany said their offers of assistance had yet to be approved. It was the North African country’s deadliest earthquake since 1960 and its most powerful in more than a century. The death toll from the 6.8 magnitude quake that struck in the High Atlas Mountains late on Friday evening rose to 2,901, while the number of people injured more than doubled to 5,530, state television reported. TALAT N’YAAQOUB, Morocco: Many survivors of Morocco’s earthquake struggled in makeshift shelters on Tuesday after a fourth night in the open, while villagers in devastated mountain areas voiced frustration at having received no help from the authorities.
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