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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Nepalis hit by twin quakes left to rebuild lives alone
By Claire COZENS
Bhaktapur, Nepal (AFP) May 14, 2015


Nepal government runs quake relief operation from tents
Kathmandu (AFP) May 14, 2015 - Ministries in Nepal battled Thursday to get aid to some of the remotest terrain on Earth, working from tents and makeshift shelters after an earthquake severely damaged government buildings in the capital.

Tuesday's deadly 7.3-magnitude quake triggered landslides and brought down buildings weakened by an even larger tremor on April 25 that killed more than 8,000 people and destroyed nearly half a million homes.

Nepal's government, which admits to being overwhelmed by the scale of the April 25 disaster, is now racing to deliver relief to remote mountainous areas in the east of the country worst hit by the latest quake.

The difficulties have been compounded by extensive damage to the Singha Durbar government complex in Kathmandu, parts of which are now so unstable they can no longer be used.

The prime minister's spokesman Uttar Kumar Khatri said even his team was now operating out of a tent, calling it a "difficult situation".

"Our operations right now are all focused on disaster management," he told AFP.

"We are now trying to see where everyone can be accommodated in buildings that are safe."

In Kathmandu, where 11 people died on Tuesday, many traumatised survivors spent another night outdoors, afraid to return to their houses.

- Search for missing chopper -

Meanwhile, a major search operation resumed Thursday for a US military helicopter that disappeared with eight people on board while delivering aid to earthquake victims.

For a third straight day, US and Nepalese military helicopters and hundreds of ground troops scoured a remote mountainous area where the chopper went missing, underscoring the huge challenge of operating in the Himalayan country.

"We began searching early today with two army helicopters. About 400 troops have been deployed for this," Rajan Dahal of the Nepal Army told AFP by phone from eastern Dolakha district where the chopper disappeared.

With many of the worst-hit areas inaccessible by road, more than 1,400 people have been airlifted from quake-hit areas, most of them by Nepalese troops.

Home ministry spokesman Laxmi Prasad Dhakal said the death toll from Tuesday's quake, which was centred 76 kilometres (47 miles) east of Kathmandu, had risen to 96 overnight with more than 2,500 wounded.

Many of the victims were in Dolakha and in neighbouring Sindhupalchowk, and the quake also killed 17 people in northern India and one in Tibet.

The tremor added to the huge challenge of getting relief to victims of the 7.8-magnitude quake of April 25, the biggest to hit Nepal in 80 years, with landslides reported to be blocking several roads.

The United Nations said there was an "urgent need for tents, generators and fuel supply to ensure that radio stations continue broadcasting and collecting information from affected communities".

Scientists said Tuesday's quake was part of a chain reaction set off by the April one that struck in Lamjung district west of Kathmandu.

"Large earthquakes are often followed by other quakes, sometimes as large as the initial one," said Carmen Solana, a volcanologist at Britain's University of Portsmouth.

"This is because the movement produced by the first quake adds extra stress on other faults and destabilises them," she told the London-based Science Media Centre.

Krishna Prajapati's house in the historic Nepali town of Bhaktapur only just withstood last month's massive earthquake, but a second one this week proved too much for the weakened structure to take.

Just a day after his home collapsed on Tuesday, the 62-year-old was out salvaging bricks from piles of rubble the army had cleared from the streets of the devastated town to begin the grim task of rebuilding.

"We thought it would be okay after the first one hit. We were camping outside just in case, but we had left all our possessions in there," said Prajapati of the home he built for his family 40 years ago.

"We came back to find everything gone."

The 7.3-magnitude quake that hit Nepal on Tuesday killed scores of people and dealt a fresh blow to a country still reeling from the devastation wrought by an even larger tremor just weeks earlier.

It brought down dozens of homes in Bhaktapur, a quiet town in the Kathmandu Valley surrounded by golden wheat fields and filled with ancient temples, although casualty numbers were low because most residents had already left their homes fearing further tremors.

Newspaper editor Kunda Dixit said life was just beginning to go back to normal in the valley when the latest quake hit, reviving memories of the first and sending people who had begun returning to their homes back into the open.

"A lot of people are traumatised -- the memory of the first one was still strong," he said.

The government has promised 200,000 Nepali rupees (around $2,000) in compensation for every home destroyed in the quake, but it remains unclear when the money will be made available.

Without it Prajapati, who ekes out a living making clay pots for the creamy buffalo milk yoghurt that Bhaktapur is famous for in Nepal, has no hope of funding construction of a new house for his family.

- 'We don't know what to do' -

In the meantime, many residents are still sleeping outdoors - the lucky ones in sturdy-looking Red Cross tents on the outskirts of the town; others under tarpaulin shelters that look unlikely to withstand the monsoon rains now just weeks away.

Nepalese troops armed with shovels were this week clearing rubble from the streets of Bhaktapur, where the government says 7,000 homes have been destroyed and another 2,000 damaged.

Even though Bhaktapur is just 15 kilometres (10 miles) from the capital Kathmandu, residents said they had received little or no government aid nearly three weeks after the first quake hit.

"We don't know what to do, the government hasn't come at all," said Gyan Budhacharya, a 40-year-old tailor whose family home has huge cracks running through its walls.

"One organisation came and gave us rice, oil, toothpaste, things like that, but we've had nothing from the government -- not even food."

Nepal's state structures remain weak after a decade-long civil war that ended in 2006, and there has been strong criticism in the media of the government's response to the crisis.

Prime Minister Sushil Koirala was abroad when the quake hit and it was three days before he addressed the nation, while parliamentarians have been accused of trying to keep tents meant for quake victims for themselves.

Grassroots groups of volunteers have stepped into the breach, taking much-needed tarpaulins and food supplies to remote areas of the mountainous country that the government has not yet reached.

In Bhaktapur though, the mood was one of resignation rather than anger.

"We got food for about two days after the quake and then nothing," said 55-year-old Tulsi Laxmi Prajapati outside the makeshift shelter she and her relatives are sharing with three other families.

"I'm not angry with the government, I never expected they would do anything for us. We cook what we can find and we share our food between us."


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