Yahoo – AFP,
Paavan Mathema, with Ammu Kannampilly at Mount Everest
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Rescuers
use a makeshift stretcher to carry an injured person after an avalanche
triggered by an earthquake flattened parts of Everest Base Camp, on April 25,
2015 (AFP Photo/Roberto Schmidt)
|
Rescuers in
Nepal searched frantically on Sunday for survivors of a quake that killed more
than 2,000, digging through rubble in the devastated capital Kathmandu and
airlifting victims of an avalanche at Everest base camp.
Terrified
residents of Kathmandu were woken by fresh aftershocks in the worst disaster to
hit the impoverished Himalayan nation in more than 80 years, with many forced
to spend the night trying to sleep out on the streets and open ground in tents.
Hospitals
were so stretched that medics had to set up tents outside to treat patients.
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Nepalese
rescue members and onlookers
gather at the collapsed Dharahara Tower
in Kathmandu on April 25, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Prakash Mathema)
|
Offers of
help poured in from around the world, with the United States and European Union
announcing they were sending in disaster response teams.
India flew
out its stranded citizens in military planes while a 62-strong Chinese rescue
team arrived with sniffer dogs.
National
police spokesman Kamal Singh Bam said the number known to have died in Nepal
had risen to 1,953 while 4,629 people had been injured.
Officials
in India said the toll there now stood at 53, mainly in the eastern state of
Bihar, while Chinese state media said 17 people had been killed in the Tibet
region.
"We
have deployed all our resources for search and rescues," Bam told AFP.
"Helicopters
have been sent to remote areas. We are sifting through the rubble where
buildings have collapsed to see if we can find anyone."
The Red
Cross said it was concerned about the fate of villages near the epicentre of
the quake northwest of Kathmandu.
Officials
said 17 people were so far known to have died on Mount Everest where an
avalanche triggered by the earthquake buried part of base camp Saturday.
It is the
deadliest disaster in Everest's history and comes almost exactly a year after
an avalanche killed 16 sherpa guides.
AFP's Nepal
bureau chief Ammu Kannampilly, on an assignment at base camp, reported that six
helicopters had managed to reach the mountain on Sunday morning after the
weather improved overnight.
Cloud of
terror
A stunning
image captured by the agency's South Asia photo chief Roberto Schmidt showed a
massive cloud of snow and debris cascading onto base camp, burying scores of
climbers and flattening tents.
"People
being stretchered out as choppers land - half a dozen this morning,"
Kannampilly said in a text message.
"Weather
clear, some snowfall."
The
country's cellphone network was working only sporadically, while large parts of
the capital were without electricity.
AFP
correspondents in Kathmandu reported that tremors were felt throughout the
night, including one strong aftershock at dawn.
"It
has been a sleepless night, how can we sleep? It has been shaking all night. We
are just praying that this will end and we can return home," said Nina
Shrestha, a 34-year-old banker who spent the night with hundreds of people on
open ground in the capital's Tudhikhel district.
As rescuers
sifted through the huge mounds of rubble, the hospitals were overflowing with
victims who suffered multiple fractures and trauma.
"We
have treated many people since yesterday, majority children," said Samir
Acharya, a doctor at Nepal's Annapurna Neurological Hospital.
"Most
patients have head injuries or fractures. Two of our patients died, two are
critical."
Acharya
said medics were working out of a tent set up in a parking lot because of
overflowing patients, while some patients were too scared to stay in the
building.
Families
had grabbed whatever possessions they could muster and sought shelter on the
streets, many of which had been split asunder.
![]() |
Nepalese
people on motorbikes ride past
a collapsed bullding in Kathmandu after an
earthquake on April 25, 2015 (AFP Photo/
Prakash Mathema)
|
Snowfalls
on Saturday had thwarted efforts to airlift survivors from Everest, where
around 800 mountaineers were gathered at the start of the annual climbing
season, cancelled last year after the sherpa deaths.
Google
executive Dan Fredinburg was one of the climbers to have been confirmed as
having been killed.
Experienced
mountaineers said panic erupted at base camp, which has been "severely
damaged", while one described the avalanche as "huge".
"Seventeen
have been reported dead so far and 61 are injured," said Tulsi Gautam of
Nepal's tourism department which issues permits to climb the world's highest
mountain.
"Those
who are able are walking down. Others are being airlifted."
'Just
flattened me'
Kannampilly
said many of those stranded at the scene were walking down the mountain rather
than risk being stuck for days.
George Foulsham,
a Singapore-based marine biologist, described the moment that the disaster
struck.
"I was outside, saw a white 50-storey building of white come at me. I ran and it just flattened me," he told AFP.
"I tried to get up and it flattened me again. I couldn't breathe, I thought I was dead. When I finally stood up, I couldn't believe it passed me over and I was almost untouched.
"I tried to get up and it flattened me again. I couldn't breathe, I thought I was dead. When I finally stood up, I couldn't believe it passed me over and I was almost untouched.
![]() |
A member of
Virginia Task Force 1, Fairfax Urban Search & Rescue Team,
walks past
equipment at their Chantilly, Virginia, headquarters, before deploying
to Nepal
(AFP Photo/Paul J. Richards)
|
"I
saved for years to climb Everest. It feels like the mountain is saying it's not
meant to be climbed for now. Too much of a coincidence to see this twice in two
years."
Nepal and
the rest of the Himalayas are particularly prone to earthquakes because of the
collision of the Indian and Eurasia plates.
An 6.8
magnitude quake hit eastern Nepal in August 1988 killing 721 people, and a
magnitude 8.1 quake killed 10,700 people in Nepal and India in 1934.
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