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Weather
multiplies survivors’ miseries
Bureau Report
MUZAFFARABAD—With snow falling on parts of Kashmir, the UN’s emergency
relief chief said Thursday that time was running out for many hungry,
homeless survivors of a massive earthquake and urged aid agencies to
speed up efforts in remote villages.
The plea came hours after an aftershock jolted parts of Pakistan,
panicking people who had survived last weekend’s devastating temblor and
forcing a rescue team to suspend efforts to save a trapped woman. She
died before the rescuers returned to the precarious rubble.
UN Undersecretary General and Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland
flew by helicopter to the hard-hit Kashmiri city of Muzaffarabad, where
he said there was an urgent need to get food, medicine, shelter and
blankets to millions of people. The U.N. estimates 2 million people are
homeless ahead of the fierce winter in the Himalayan region.
The death toll was believed to be more than 35,000 and tens of thousands
were injured. India has reported more than 1,350 deaths in the part of
Kashmir that it controls. Trucks with aid from dozens of countries
choked the roads up to the crumbling towns of Kashmir, but access to
some areas remained blocked because of landslides and people in many
remote areas where there are no roads were still in desperate straits
five days after the temblor struck.
The United Nations estimated some 4 million people were affected,
including 2 million who lost homes, and warned that measles and other
diseases could break out. “I fear we are losing the race against the
clock in the small villages” cut off by blocked roads, Egeland said.
“I’ve never seen such devastation before. We are in the sixth day of
operation, and every day the scale of devastation is getting wider”.
The 5.6-magnitude aftershock was centered 85 miles north of Islamabad,
near the epicenter of Saturday’s 7.6-magnitude quake that demolished
whole towns, mostly in Kashmir and northwestern Pakistan. It shook
buildings, but no significant damage in the already demolished region
was reported.
“There was a lot of panic. People were scared. Even those who were
sleeping in tents came out. Everybody was crying,” said Nisar Abbasi,
36, an accountant camping on the lawn of his destroyed home in
Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir.
Carrying water, juice and milk, a relief team from Britain-based Plan
International flew in a helicopter to villages in northern Mansehra
district in North West Frontier Province and found scenes of death and
desperation.
“The whole valley is smelling awfully,” said Dr. Irfan Ahmed, the aid
group’s health adviser. “People were hungry and panicking. We organized
them and gave charge to the people there so they could distribute
according to needs”.
He said it rained and already started to snow on Wednesday, with winter
just five weeks away. “Conditions are going from bad to worse. These
people don’t have any shelter. Also the school has collapsed, and the
children were in those classrooms,” he said. Ahmed said he saw one
elderly survivor evacuated with a semiconscious 3-year-old boy who was
barely moving, his skin cold and clammy.
A 22-year-old woman trapped in the rubble in Muzaffarabad died Thursday
after the aftershock disrupted efforts to rescue her, rescuers and
witnesses said.
British, German and Turkish teams had worked until 2 a.m., trying to
extract the woman after a sniffer dog detected her in the debris. But
they were forced to suspend their efforts amid fears for their own
safety when the aftershock shifted the building in which they were
working.
When the rescuers returned after daybreak, the sniffer dog whined,
indicating that it had detected the smell of a corpse. Some rescue
workers wept. “It was a very difficult decision to leave a living person
and I had a responsibility to my team. It could have meant their death,”
said Steff Hopkins, a British team leader.
Dozens of aftershocks have occurred since the main quake, including a
6.2-magnitude temblor. “They will go on for months, possibly years,”
said Don Blakeman, geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey’s National
Earthquake Information Center.
Hope of finding survivors dwindled in Muzaffarabad, where Britain’s
Department for International Development was pulling out its team of 60
search and rescue workers, said Rob Holden, the team leader for U.N.
disaster assessment and coordination, which is overseeing the overall
rescue effort.
“No one is giving up but it is the acceptance that the actual real
chances of finding someone alive are almost nil, so we don’t need all
the specialist international teams,” Holden said, adding that 18
international teams are still in the region.
German, Afghan, Pakistani and U.S. helicopters delivered tents, blankets
and medical equipment and brought back dozens of badly injured people on
each return flight. The United Nations estimated some 4 million people
were affected, including 2 million who lost homes, and warned that
measles and other diseases could break out.
Earlier this week, the U.N. launched an international appeal for $272
million for six months of emergency aid to Pakistan. Some 30 nations
have contributed relief supplies and manpower but Egeland said he
believes countries should provide more help.
“We have seen a much graver picture and I believe we need to triple the
number of helicopters in the operation. My appeal to the world is to
come up with more aid, more relief, and more resources,” he said.
Egeland said he thought the initial response was “not bad,” given the
difficulties of blocked roads and rain. “Tens of thousands of tents,
hundreds of thousands of tons of emergency food, a million blankets and
other relief goods are in the pipeline,” he said. |