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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Nepal PM appeals for $2bn to rebuild country after quakes
by Staff Writers
Kathmandu (AFP) May 17, 2015


Quake-hit Nepal imposes two-month ban on new buildings
Kathmandu (AFP) May 18, 2015 - Nepal Monday imposed a two-month moratorium on the start of new building projects and limited current construction to two storeys after recent deadly earthquakes destroyed nearly half a million homes.

Officials said the move would give authorities time to review building standards in the wake of a 7.8-magnitude quake on April 25 and a smaller one last week that reduced much of the capital Kathmandu to rubble.

Other rural areas were also left in ruins by the two quakes.

"We have halted permits for new buildings, and put a pause on approved buildings that have not begun construction," said Purna Chandra Bhattarai, joint secretary at the ministry of federal affairs and local development.

"We need to revisit our building norms and standards and this pause will give us that time," he said.

Buildings already under construction will be restricted to two storeys until a new government committee comes up with recommendations to revise the current building code by mid-July, Bhattarai told AFP.

The earthquakes, which killed more than 8,500 people and made thousands homeless, highlighted the number of homes and offices built with sub-standard materials and with a routine disregard for regulations.

Nepal has a history of earthquakes, with a disaster in 1934 also reducing much of Kathmandu to rubble.

The government has set aside $200 million for a national reconstruction and rehabilitation fund, and has asked the international community to contribute a further $1.8 billion towards rebuilding.

Nepal's prime minister on Sunday appealed for $2 billion to rebuild his country, shattered by two massive earthquakes in three weeks that have killed thousands and devastated the impoverished nation's infrastructure.

On April 25 a 7.8-magnitude quake, the deadliest to hit the country in more than 80 years, killed more than 8,500 people and destroyed half a million homes.

That was followed weeks later by a second massive tremor that triggered landslides and brought down houses, triggering fresh misery for people still traumatised by the earlier quake.

The disasters have also left their mark on the impoverished Himalayan nation's infrastructure and development.

Prime Minister Sushil Koirala, whose year-old government has faced criticism over the speed of its response to the quakes, said Sunday that the administration has set up a national rehabilitation and reconstruction fund, and urged donors to help.

"Our target is to raise $2 billion. Government has earmarked $200 million as a seed money for the fund with a request to donors communities and private sector to make necessary contribution," Koirala said.

"Rehabilitation and reconstruction is very important for us and we hope our friends will come with a large heart to assist."

More than 20 countries have been involved in relief efforts since the first quake struck, sending rescuers to help search for survivors and aid in relief efforts.

Earlier this month the UN said it had received just $22 million of the $415 million it had appealed for following the disasters.

A US marine helicopter delivering aid went missing last week and was found crashed in a remote forest on Friday. According to the Nepalese army, the bodies of eight servicemen on board, six American and two Nepalese, were recovered and brought to the capital Kathmandu on Sunday.

Aid agencies have warned of a race against time to provide shelter and bring relief to victims before the approaching monsoon season triggers more landslides and blocks access to quake-hit villages located along the Himalayan nation's hills and mountains.

Koirala's government has said it was overwhelmed by the scale of the April 25 earthquake, and that the country was unprepared for the second tremor.


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