*** Rescuers hunt for survivors of massive Afghan-Pakistan quake | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Rescuers hunt for survivors of massive Afghan-Pakistan quake

Rescuers were Tuesday picking their way through rugged terrain and pockets of Taliban insurgency in the search for survivors after a massive quake hit Pakistan and Afghanistan, killing more than 300 people.

The toll was expected to rise as search teams reach remote areas that were cut off by Monday's powerful 7.5 magnitude quake, which triggered landslides and stampedes as it toppled buildings and severed communication lines.

A police official in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar told AFP they had not been able to get in touch with authorities in the district of Kohistan in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to see how its population of nearly half a million people had fared.

"There is no way to communicate with the officials in Kohistan, the communication system has been disrupted and roads blocked so we cannot say anything about the damage there," the official told AFP.

In other remote areas residents -- including children and the elderly -- were helping with relief work, many of them digging through rubble for survivors. The bulk of the casualties were recorded in Pakistan, where 228 people were killed, including 184 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, and more than 1,600 injured, disaster management authorities said.

Pakistan army helicopters began evacuating victims Tuesday to Peshawar and Rawalpindi. The military has also sent medical teams, tents and rations to affected areas, while India -- whose relationship with Islamabad is often prickly -- said it stood ready to help. For many, Monday's quake brought back traumatic memories of a 7.6 magnitude quake that struck in October 2005, killing more than 75,000 people.

Muzaffarabad resident Shehnaz Rasheed, 34, whose daughter was killed in the 2005 disaster, said that as the quake struck he feared "doomsday was being repeated". "I ran towards my children's school leaving everything behind -- I did not even close the doors of my house and did not care for anything on the road," he told AFP, explaining he was frantic to reach his two sons so he could "die together with them if we have to die".

Afghan officials said at least 76 people were confirmed dead and hundreds more injured, with casualties reported from around half a dozen of the country's 34 provinces, and some 4,000 homes reported damaged. The government has implored aid agencies for assistance.

But large swathes of Badakhshan, the remote province where the epicentre is located, and other areas are effectively controlled by the Taliban, posing a huge challenge to any official aid efforts. The militants on Tuesday urged charity organisations not to hold back in delivering aid, and vowed its fighters would provide "complete help" in the affected areas.