Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Earth Science News .




DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Fresh rain hampers rescue bid in flood-ravaged Kashmir
by Staff Writers
Srinagar, India (AFP) Sept 14, 2014


Fresh rain hampered rescue operations in Indian Kashmir Sunday a week after deadly floods swamped the Himalayan region, with medics and survivors describing nightmarish conditions in the devastated city of Srinagar.

The floods and landslides have now claimed at least 490 lives in India and neighbouring Pakistan, and rescuers are struggling to cope with the scale of the disaster.

After a few clear days, more rainfall accompanied by thunder and lightning hit relief operations in the worst affected areas of Srinagar, the normally scenic city on the Indian side.

Indian Kashmir's Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, who has come under fire over the slow pace of the rescue effort, admitted his government was "completely paralysed" in its immediate response to the disaster.

"We had no way to communicate with anyone, and other than a walkie talkie set...we were totally and completely isolated from everyone and everywhere," Abdullah wrote in a first-person account published in the Indian Express newspaper on Sunday.

Security forces have been using boats and helicopters to deliver food and evacuate survivors in both countries.

But the relief effort is fraught with danger and at least 11 people, including a bridegroom, drowned Sunday when a rescue boat carrying a wedding party capsized in the Muzaffargarh district of Pakistan's Punjab province, according to a senior government official.

While nine stranded patients at Kashmir's biggest maternity care facility Lal Ded Hospital were finally evacuated on Friday, some relatives continued to wade through chest-deep water to look for family members who had been admitted before floods struck.

One woman, who gave birth in the hospital, told AFP of her rescue from the swirling floodwaters in the hospital.

"We took refuge inside a mosque for three days after some local young men rescued us from the hospital," she said, without giving a name.

"We are in the middle of a sea without any help."

Doctors at the state-run Bone and Joint Hospital in Srinagar scrambled to treat casualties afer medical supplies were carried off by the waters.

"We need medicines of all kinds, it is a disaster", a doctor, speaking anonymously, told an AFP reporter while examining a patient. "Tons of medicines were just washed away."

Medics are having to work round the clock to help treat patients who have sustained fractures, with submerged potholes a particular danger.

"I made 20 casts today," hospital worker Ghulan Hassan told AFP as he tried to prepare the casts in a room whose floor had caved in.

- Worries of epidemic -

The new rainfall magnified the stench of death from animal carcasses, rotting vegetables and overflowing drains.

"It makes your eyes burn, gives you a headache," Mehraj-Ud-Din Shah, chief of the Indian Kashmir State Disaster Response Force, told AFP.

Officials said it was too early to assess the full extent of the disaster with many roads still impassable but Abdullah wrote that the recovery effort was "going to be a long, hard, and very steep climb".

O.P. Singh, director general of the National Disaster Response Force, said the big worry now was of the spread of water-borne diseases.

"Many parts are still submerged in four to five feet of water and we are concentrating on supplying anti-diarrhoea, anti-infection medicines and using chlorine to avert diseases," he said in Srinagar.

"We have had to halt our operations for some time and we are waiting for the weather to clear," Indian Air Force spokesman Gerard Galway told AFP.

In Pakistan, rescue operations were concentrated around the central city of Multan, home to two million people, where authorities blew up two dykes to try to stop the water inundating the city.

"Multan is practically cut off from the surrounding districts: roads and railway track were submerged," Zahid Salim Gondal, a senior government official, told AFP, adding that 29,295 people had been rescued.

Some 300 villages around Muzaffargarh have been inundated and the flooding has also devastated thousands of acres of cotton crop.

India's government estimates at least 200 people have died and 142,000 people have been rescued.

Pakistan, which has suffered a series of annual flood disasters, says 2.29 million people have been affected.

Around 290 are known to have died in the Punjab, Pakistani Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan regions.

burs-anb/co/jom

.


Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
A world of storm and tempest
When the Earth Quakes






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Dutch say need to know MH17 missile launch site to prosecute
Rotterdam, Netherlands (AFP) Sept 12, 2014
Dutch prosecutors said Friday they need to know where a missile that may have shot down flight MH17 was fired from in eastern Ukraine before criminal charges could be laid. "When we know from where it was fired, then we can find out who controlled that area," and possibly prosecute, Dutch chief investigator Fred Westerbeke told journalists in Rotterdam. "The most likely scenario was that ... read more


DISASTER MANAGEMENT
At least 17 dead as flood rescue boat capsizes in Pakistan

Shikaras to the rescue on Kashmir's flooded paradise

Fresh rain hampers rescue bid in flood-ravaged Kashmir

Dutch say need to know MH17 missile launch site to prosecute

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Ceramics don't have to be brittle

Hewlett-Packard buys cloud-computing firm Eucalyptus

Angling chromium to let oxygen through

Europe's new age of metals begins

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Scientific discoveries during search for missing plane

New curbs on trade in threatened sharks

Ocean Warming Affecting Florida Reefs

Indian Ocean expedition pioneers citizen oceanography

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Past temperature in Greenland adjusted

Study resolves discrepancy in Greenland temperatures during end of last ice age

Russia dispatches naval force to reopen Arctic base

New study clears up Greenland climate puzzle

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
EU tightens rules to prevent new horsemeat scandal

Diversified farming practices might preserve evolutionary diversity of wildlife

Food safety fears see farming return to high-rise Hong Kong

Globalization threatens benefits of an African 'green revolution'

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
'Dangerous' hurricane eyes Mexico Pacific resorts

Mexico issues hurricane watch as Odile swirls in Pacific

Typhoon Kalmaegi sweeps out of Philippines

Seismic gap may be filled by an earthquake near Istanbul

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Mozambique rebel leader to hit the campaign trail

Obama to discuss Ebola response with top medical experts

Rwanda arrests prompt purge speculation

Somalia's Shebab rebels appoint new leader

DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Non-dominant hand vital to the evolution of the thumb

Study ties groundwater to human evolution

Evolutionary tools improve prospects for sustainable development

Chinese doctors discover woman missing cerebellum




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement All images and articles appearing on Space Media Network have been edited or digitally altered in some way. Any requests to remove copyright material will be acted upon in a timely and appropriate manner. Any attempt to extort money from Space Media Network will be ignored and reported to Australian Law Enforcement Agencies as a potential case of financial fraud involving the use of a telephonic carriage device or postal service.