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Nepal - 'Terrible scenes of destruction...'

makapaaa

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REDUCED TO RUBBLE: A man crying as he walked along a street yesterday, following the earthquake that hit Nepal and neighbouring regions on Saturday. A Singapore search and rescue team was heading for the Himalayan nation.


PHOTO: REUTERS








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WRECKED: An avalanche hit part of the Everest base camp, killing at least 18 people. More than 2,400 people have been killed in Nepal.


PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE









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Published on Apr 27, 2015
'Terrible scenes of destruction...'






KATHMANDU
INTERNATIONAL aid groups and governments intensified efforts to get rescuers and supplies into Nepal, where more than 2,400 people were killed when a 7.8-magnitude earthquake hit the capital Kathmandu and neighbouring regions on Saturday.

Asian and European nations as well as the United States sent emergency crews to reinforce those scrambling to find survivors in Kathmandu, and in rural areas cut off by blocked roads and patchy phone networks.

A Singapore search and rescue team was also heading for the Himalayan nation, while members of the Singapore Armed Forces would support the relief efforts with deployment of "suitable resources".

In a statement yesterday, Singapore's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it has not received any reports of Singaporeans having been injured.

"We know...many areas - both rural and in some of the larger towns - have suffered landslides and roads are cut off," said Mike Bruce, regional communications manager for Plan International aid organisation, lamenting the inaccessibility of many places.

In Kathmandu, a lack of electricity would soon be complicated by a scarcity of water, aid groups said, with medical supplies also dwindling.

"We witnessed terrible scenes of destruction - hospitals were evacuated with patients being treated on the ground outside, homes and buildings demolished and some roads cracked wide open," said Eleanor Trinchera, Caritas Australia programme coordinator for Nepal.

Oxfam, an international anti-poverty organisation, said mortuaries were reaching capacity.

Survivors slept in the open in Kathmandu overnight, braving the cold for fear of being crushed by the teetering ruins of buildings.

Hundreds of structures, including office blocks and a landmark 60m Dharahara Tower built in 1832 for the queen of Nepal, crashed to the ground at around midday on Saturday when the quake struck.

At least 700 people were killed in Kathmandu, a city of about one million people where many homes are old, flimsy and packed close together.

Close to 6,000 people have been injured across the country of 28 million.

The earthquake, centred 80km north-west of Kathmandu, was all the more destructive as it struck just 31km underground.

Rescuers searched frantically yesterday in Kathmandu for survivors of the quake, digging through rubble.

Army officer Santosh Nepal and a group of rescuers worked all night to open a passage into a collapsed building in Kathmandu.

They had to use pickaxes because bulldozers could not get through the ancient city's narrow streets.

"We believe there are still people trapped inside," Mr Nepal said, pointing at concrete debris and twisted reinforcement rods where a three-storey residential building once stood.

Rescue efforts were also hampered by aftershocks, including one registering 6.7 magnitude.

The earthquake and the aftershocks also jolted neighbouring countries, killing some 49 people in India, 17 in China's Tibet region and four in Bangladesh.

Meanwhile, snowfall on Saturday thwarted efforts to airlift survivors from a quake-triggered avalanche that hit part of the Everest base camp, killing at least 18 people, although helicopters started landing yesterday.

Another 100 climbers higher up Everest, at camps 1 and 2, were safe but their way back down the mountain was blocked by damage to the treacherous Khumbu icefalls, scene of an avalanche that killed 16 sherpa guides last year.
Google executive Dan Fredinburg was among the climbers confirmed to have been killed on Saturday.

It is the deadliest disaster in Everest's history and came almost exactly a year after last year's killer avalanche.

Journalist Ammu Kannampilly said many of those stranded at the base camp were walking down the mountain rather than risk being stuck for days.

George Foulsham, a Singapore-based marine biologist, described the moment the disaster struck.

"I was outside, saw a 50-storey building of white come at me. I ran and it just flattened me," he said.

"I tried to get up and it flattened me again. I couldn't breathe, I thought I was dead. When I finally stood up, I couldn't believe it passed me over and I was almost untouched."

There is an estimated 300,000 foreign tourists in Nepal at this time of the year.

A Singapore Everest team at the mountain's base camp has decided to wait seven days before assessing whether to continue its bid.

Comprising four trekkers, the team set out with the objective of flying the Singapore flag at the Everest peak to mark SG50, and has trained for about five years for it.

Nepal and the rest of the Himalayas are particularly prone to earthquakes because of the collision of the Indian and Eurasia plates.

A 6.8-magnitude quake hit eastern Nepal in August 1988, killing 721 people, and a 8.1-magnitude quake killed 10,700 people in Nepal and India in 1934.
AGENCIES
 

makapaaa

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[h=3][/h]OVERWHELMED: Health workers taking care of injured people outside the Manmohan Memorial Community Hospital. Medics were being helped by an army of volunteers, including foreign tourists who were in Nepal.


PHOTO: EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY





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Published on Apr 27, 2015
[h=2]Hospitals, mortuaries struggling to cope[/h]




KATHMANDU
NEPALESE doctors set up makeshift operating theatres in a hospital carpark yesterday, as they worked round the clock to treat the wounded from a monster quake that has left mortuaries overflowing with bodies.

As disaster officials reported that nearly 6,000 people were injured in Saturday's 7.8-magnitude quake, medics in the impoverished Himalayan nation told of how they had been unable to save some of the most grievously wounded.

Their efforts were further hampered by fresh aftershocks that were felt throughout much of the morning, making many patients too scared to stay inside medical facilities.

Samir Acharya, a doctor at Annapurna Neurological Hospital, described how medics were working out of a tent set up in a carpark after being overwhelmed by patients.

"Most patients have head injuries or fractures," he said, as people wept outside the hospital while they waited for news of loved ones inside.

With the death toll from the disaster rising above 2,400, hospitals were also struggling to find places to store the bodies.

At the city's oldest hospital, Bir Hospital, there were around a dozen dead bodies placed on the floor with relatives trying to shoo away the flies.

A security guard said that around 100 bodies had been taken away for cremation since yesterday morning.

Medics were being helped by an army of volunteers, including foreign tourists who were in the Himalayan nation when the disaster struck.

Portuguese tourist Heli Camarinha responded to a plea for help on local television.

"I was really lucky to have not been injured during the earthquake yesterday. This morning, when I saw on the local news that hospitals needed volunteers, I decided to come here to try and help," said the 28-year-old.

"I have been doing whatever I can, from cleaning the patient wards, helping transfer them to different hospital floors on the stretcher, basically any way possible."

One of those being treated at the trauma centre was 25-year-old Suresh Pariyar, who suffered back injuries when a building he was walking past in the capital suddenly pancaked.

"The earth was shaking and moments later I found myself under the debris in pain," he said.

"I was begging for help but everyone was running in panic to save themselves. I crawled from under the debris. My friend's 13-year-old son died instantly just metres away from me."

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
 
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