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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Nepal quake highlights Everest technology
By Ammu KANNAMPILLY
Kathmandu (AFP) May 2, 2015


Amputations to fractures, Nepal doctors race to help quake injured
Kathmandu (AFP) May 1, 2015 - At Nepal's crowded National Trauma Centre, overwhelmed doctors make split-second life or death decisions, arranging earthquake victims into order of priority and trying where possible to avoid amputations.

Santush Paudel inspects a frail 65-year-old woman lying still and silent on a stretcher in the Kathmandu hospital, before hanging a yellow badge around her neck during triage.

"Building stones fell on her during the earthquake, fracturing her pelvis," the doctor said, placing her in the intermediate category.

A red badge is for the most seriously injured requiring an urgent operation while a green one means the patient is free to leave hospital after an examination.

The centre, attached to the Nepalese capital's Bir Hospital, is swarming with overworked medics, aid officials and volunteers following Saturday's monster 7.8-magnitude quake that has killed more than 6,000 people.

In the immediate hours after the disaster, some 2,000 people seeking treatment descended on the centre, which has only 150 beds.

"We have faced logistical problems of space and personnel," said the centre's coordinator Thapa Buland.

"We've opened up the halls, and some injured have been sleeping on mattresses on the floor and even outside. The situation has improved a little but now we're facing an influx of casualties arriving from the mountains and districts far from the capital," the doctor added.

Aftershocks and a rugged, mountainous terrain meant it was a couple of days before wounded survivors from remote villages could be airlifted to safety.

Pushpak Kumar Newar of non-governmental organisation Handicap International said: "When districts are evacuated and helicopters turn up, there can be 30 victims all arriving at once."

Newar said the volume of arrivals made spending the appropriate amount of time examining each patient properly difficult and avoiding amputations was a major challenge.

On the fourth floor of the centre on Thursday, a five year-old girl, with both her legs and a hand in plaster, sobbed down the telephone to her mother.

- 'I thought she was going to die' -

It was the first time Sabita Nepal had spoken to her mother since the immediate aftermath of the quake, the deadliest to strike Nepal in more than 80 years.

"On Saturday I carried Sabita for three kilometres to find some transport," wept her father. "I saw that her legs were limp and swinging from side to side. I thought she was going to die," he wailed.

The quake destroyed her family's livelihood in a village in worst-hit Sindhupalchowk district, northeast of Kathmandu.

"Our animals are dead, there was nothing for us to eat, there are fears of epidemics. Here there is a lot more help," said Sabita's father.

In the next bed lay eight-year-old Salina Dhakal, whose skull was fractured during the quake and who travelled three hours with her family to Kathmandu for treatment. She clutched her teddy bear and wiped her eyes as her mother lamented their predicament.

Downstairs in the waiting room, dozens of patients who were assigned green badges sat on mattresses free to go. But many seemed reluctant to leave -- they had nowhere to head to after their homes were turned into piles of rubble.

When an avalanche thundered down Mount Everest last weekend, guides tweeted calls for help and dramatic video footage quickly went viral as trekkers accessed wifi on the roof of the world.

When Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the summit of the world's highest mountain 62 years ago, news didn't reach the outside world until four days afterwards and no photographs of Hillary were taken at the top.

"As soon as I spoke with colleagues and realised the impact of this snow tsunami, I tweeted about it so we could get help to deal with this huge disaster," said veteran guide Dan Mazur.

The 7.8-magnitude quake that struck Nepal Saturday, killing more than 6,700 people, sent a cascade of snow tearing through Everest base camp, leaving more than a dozen dead and scores injured.

Within minutes reports and photos of the disaster were circulating widely across social media, largely due to the actions of mountaineers like Mazur, sparking relief operations into action and helping save lives.

"A Massive earthquake just hit Everest. Basecamp has been severely damaged. Our team is caught in camp 1. Please pray for everyone," the American posted on Twitter, moments after the avalanche roared past.

The contrast to the news emerging of Hillary and sherpa Tenzing's monumental feat in becoming the first climbers to reach the top of the 8,848-metre (29,029-foot) high mountain in 1953, could not be more stark.

They arrived at the summit on the 29 May but word did not reach London until June 2, just in time for Queen Elizabeth II's coronation.

No pictures were taken of Hillary at the top, apparently because Tenzing did not know how to work a camera. But in his autobiography the New Zealander claimed it had never occurred to him to ask for a picture.

Today, the hundreds of tech-savvy climbers who attempt Everest every year are armed with smartphones, iPads and laptops that they use to live-tweet their ascents to a global audience.

AFP Roberto Schmidt sent his dramatic photograph of the avalanche via a Broadband Global Area Network (BGAN) terminal.

- Summit sharing -

Mazur, 55, said he initially perceived social media as an easy way for climbers and staff to communicate with their families during expeditions but eventually came to appreciate its value as a safety tool.

"When I first started climbing in the Himalayas 25 years ago, it would have been days before people would have realised that an accident had occurred and sent help," he told AFP from Everest base camp.

"When I think about the fact that I am in base camp right now using a mobile phone to talk to a journalist in Kathmandu, I have to say it's pretty amazing in terms of getting the word out," Mazur added.

Mountaineer Adrian Ballinger's company, Alpenglow Expeditions, provides clients with 18 hours of wifi a day at altitudes where atmospheric oxygen drops to dangerously low levels.

They have 36 solar panels powering eight generators and climbers are able to charge 40 devices at the same time.

"Climbing used to be this solitary experience, but people are very interested in sharing their journey now, whether it's through Twitter, Facebook, WhatsApp," Ballinger told AFP.

"The big difficulty is managing the power supply -- we use solar power but we also need to carry these bulky batteries and systems as we go up mountains," he said.

As well as the ability to send an SOS call, wifi provides better access to weather forecasts and opportunities for climbers to attract sponsorship deals in a crowded marketplace.

In October 2010, US adventurer Eric Larsen became the first person to tweet from the roof of the world when he sent out the message, "Everest summit!" with a reference to his sponsor -- satellite communication company DeLorme.

Soon afterwards, Nepalese telecom group Ncell set up a station providing a high-speed third-generation (3G) phone network at an altitude of 5,200 metres, offering Internet services to anyone with a smartphone.

"All this technology is helpful in terms of letting people know you are safe when something terrible happens," said the British Ballinger.

"On the other hand, in this hyper-connected age, I find that people tend to panic if they don't hear from you immediately because they expect you to always be online."

Key facts about the Nepal quake, one week on
Kathmandu (AFP) May 2, 2015 - A week on from a 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck Nepal, flattening large parts of the capital Kathmandu and causing devastation across the impoverished Himalayan nation, here are some key facts about the disaster.

- Death toll -

- 6,621 people are known to have died in Nepal alone and 14,023 others were injured

- More than 100 people were killed in neighbouring India and China

- 18 climbers died at Mount Everest base camp when the quake sparked an avalanche

- Two Americans, an Australian, a Japanese and a Chinese national were among the victims on the mountain

- 1,000 European Union citizens are missing, the EU says

- 12 others from EU countries have been confirmed dead

- Survivors -

- Eight million people, or around a quarter of Nepal's population, have been affected, the United Nations estimates

- 2.8 million Nepalese were displaced

- More than 3.5 million people are estimated to be in need of food assistance

- 1.7 million children are in need of humanitarian aid in the worst-hit areas, according to UNICEF

- Aid -

- Rescuers from 22 countries are involved in the relief effort while $61 million has been pledged, according to the UN

- Britain has promised $15 million

- $12.5 million has been pledged by the United States

- $15 million is being released from the UN's emergency fund

- The UN has appealed for $415 million while UNICEF is seeking to raise $50.35 million

- The United Nations' Food and Agricultural Organization has appealed for $8 million for farmers

- The World Food Programme says it needs US$116.5 million to provide food for 1.4 million people

- Reconstruction -

- 160,786 homes were destroyed and another 143,673 damaged

- The UN says that up to 90 percent of health facilities in four districts were severely damaged

- Some 16,000 schools were damaged

- Reconstruction costs could top $5 billion -- around 20 percent of the country's GDP -- according to business research consultancy IHS


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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Climbing to resume on Mount Everest by next week: official
Kathmandu (AFP) April 30, 2015
Climbing will resume on Mount Everest by next week after an earthquake-triggered avalanche that left 18 people dead on the world's highest peak, a Nepalese government official said Thursday. Saturday's avalanche that ripped through base camp also destroyed ladders through the treacherous Khumbu icefall higher up the mountain, raising doubts about the future of this year's climbing season. ... read more


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