|
Many quake survivors still trapped in hills
Staff Report
MUZAFFARABAD—The engineering battalion promised by NATO to help reach
untold numbers of quake survivors in the rugged hills of northern
Pakistan is needed right now, an international aid official said on
Saturday. In another move aimed at easing the suffering of survivors of
the October 8 quake, India offered to set up three relief centers along
a de facto border dividing it from Pakistan in the Kashmir region.
“The emphasis is on the need for road engineers. If we can open the
roads, that would solve everything,” World Food Programme spokeswoman
Mia Turner said, referring to NATO’s move. “More than 2,000 villages
have to be reached and they have to be reached by roads,” she said two
weeks after the shattering earthquake killed more than 53,000 people and
wrecked the few roads which wound high into the hills. “If these people
were connected, we wouldn’t be carrying stuff up and down mountains on
mules,” she said as another train of the rented animals set off up into
the hills from a village above the destroyed Pakistani Kashmir capital
of Muzaffarabad.
Each mule can carry 100 kg (220 pounds), but like everything else in the
disaster zone, they are in short supply. U.N. officials said more
helicopters were needed to get tents out before the harsh Himalayan
winter descends. “The top priority overall is tents and emergency
shelter,” U.N. coordinator Jan Vandermoortele said. “We need
helicopters, a lot of helicopters and all types of helicopters.” The
known death toll is expected to rise substantially, with people laying
buried in the rubble of cut-off villages. More than 75,000 people are
known to have been injured seriously and opening the roads would also
allow the many more in cut-off villages to get medical treatment needed
to survive. The helicopter aid fleet, which Vandermoortele said had only
50 operational at any one time, cannot deliver enough or reach
everywhere and pilots report villagers waving flags to signal they
needed help, Turner said. Some were even trying to clear areas for
helipads. The Pakistani army is working around the clock to open roads
covered by landslides or swept away by the quake in Pakistani Kashmir
and adjoining North West Frontier Province.
Lieutenant General Salahuddin Satti said he hoped the road up Pakistani
Kashmir’s Jhelum valley would be re-opened in a week, but it would take
six weeks for the nearby Neelum valley. In some parts of Pakistani
Kashmir, people are desperate enough to fight each other for food aid or
loot supply trucks. Hopes of a massive airlift to bring survivors to
safety were dashed on Friday when NATO turned down a U.N. appeal. The
U.S.-dominated military alliance said it would send up to 1,000 troops
to help, but would not stage an airlift.
“It will help a lot,” Vandermoortele said, who, like other aid officials
complained the world was not doing enough. “But we need more, we need
much more, and we need it much faster.” NATO will send only six more
helicopters to join the 40 that members of the alliance have sent.
Helicopters are the only means of getting quickly deep into the hills.
The nearest are in India, where the quake killed 1,300 people, but it
has fought two of its three wars with Pakistan over Kashmir, which both
claim.
|