Tag: earthquake

  • Nepals Asks Foreign Countries To Wrap Up Search And Rescue Missions

    Nepals Asks Foreign Countries To Wrap Up Search And Rescue Missions

    KATHMANDU – Nepal has asked foreign countries to wrap up search and rescue operations nine days after a devastating earthquake killed more than 7,200 people, now there is no hope of finding people alive in the rubble.

    Dozens of countries sent teams to look for survivors after the Himalayan nation was hit by a 7.8-magnitude quake on April 25, its worst since 1934, but the Nepal government now believes the search and rescue work has been nearly completed.

    “They can leave. If they are also specialists in clearing the rubble, they can stay,” Rameshwor Dangal, an official at Nepal’s home ministry, told Reuters on Monday.

    The quake killed 7,276 people and wounded over 14,300. Nepalese Prime Minister Sushil Koirala earlier estimated the death toll could reach 10,000.

    On Monday, police and local volunteers found the bodies of about 100 trekkers and villagers buried in an avalanche set off by the earthquake in a remote district and were digging through snow and ice for scores more missing.

    Many countries have pledged money that will be necessary to rebuild homes, hospitals and historic buildings. Others such as neighboring India have sent trucks to deliver aid and deployed helicopters to rescue thousands of people from remote towns and villages.

    The chief of India’s National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), which was among the first foreign organizations to arrive after the quake, said it had been asked by the Nepalese government to conclude its search and rescue operation.

    “All the search and rescue teams, not the relief (teams) … have been asked to return,” NDRF Director General O.P. Singh told Indian television. “We will see how best it can be done.”

    The United Nations has said 8 million of Nepal’s 28 million people were affected by the quake, with at least 2 million needing tents, water, food and medicines over the next three months.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Singapore Team Abandoned Plan To Scale Mount Everest, Returns Home

    Singapore Team Abandoned Plan To Scale Mount Everest, Returns Home

    Aluminaid Team Singapore, which gave up its mission to scale Mount Everest following the Nepal earthquake, landed safely at Changi Airport on Monday night (May 4).

    The climbers, Ismail Latiff, Zulkifli Latiff, and Nur Yusrina Yaakob, came back to Singapore after spending two months at Mount Everest. They were evacuated from Everest base camp (EBC) on Friday to Kathmandu Airport, after they abandoned their climb on Apr 29.

    The trio’s return was met with applause and tearful embraces.

    Ms Yusrina, 28, recounted the moment when she witnessed the first earthquake in her life.

    “When the earthquake happened, we definitely felt it – the shaking and everything – but thankfully we were in one of the safest spots of the base camp, we were spared. We just tried to react to the situation, and we got into our tents.”


    Her 50-year-old mother, Ms Rosnani Ismail said tearfully: “I was so worried when I heard of the news. I didn’t know what to think. I just talked to my husband. He didn’t say a word, he was just so quiet. We were thinking about our daughter’s safety.”

    The team had embarked on the mission to mark Singapore’s Golden Jubilee, and had been planning the feat since 2010.

    Aluminaid’s team captain Muhammad Hilwan Mohamed Idrus, who was unable to join them on the trip, told reporters: “The team left Singapore on Mar 25, and their expedition began in rotation – one team would climb and come back to rest for a few days while another team goes up. The teams finished their first rotation and was supposed to go for the second one on Apr 25. But the guide just decided shift it back by one day – a lucky thing to do. If not, they would have met the avalanche.”

    That was not the only close shave for the team. “The earthquake hit the front part of EBC. The EBC is pretty huge, and the team’s base camp site is located at the back of the EBC. Their camp site was unscathed – they were not injured in any way. Just about 100m from the camp site, other tents were flattened. You can imagine how close we are,” Mr Hilwan said.

    As they were unable to proceed up Everest, the team members looked to contributing to the search and rescue efforts.

    “After the avalanche, they were doing a lot of monitoring. They also wanted to help with the search and rescue, but the Nepali operators there did not allow them due to safety issues,” the captain added. “The team was quite shaken and even one of their mountain guide’s uncle was caught in the avalanche and passed away. Their guides were very worried about their families back in Kamanthu, and thank goodness we had out satellite phones, which were passed around to the guides to contact their families.”

    Another team member, Seumas Yeo, returned to Singapore last Wednesday as he suffered from an abscess a week before the earthquake. He was recovering in the hotel post-operation when the quake struck Nepal.

    Describing the experience as “scary”, Mr Yeo said: “The whole building shook and I felt like the roof was going to fall on me. I walked down the street and it was chaotic, people were closing and running out of shops. I saw a collapsed building and people were pulling out bodies from it.”

    He added that many people were huddling under trees for cover, shouting: “Shiva, Shiva!” or chanting Buddhist prayers.

    Mr Hilwan said that the team will be holding a press conference next Monday (May 11).

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 101 Year Old Man Pulled Alive From Rubble In Nepal

    101 Year Old Man Pulled Alive From Rubble In Nepal

    A 101-year-old man has been pulled alive from the rubble of his house in Nepal, seven days after it collapsed in a deadly earthquake, police say.

    Funchu Tamang was rescued on Saturday with only minor injuries and airlifted to a district hospital, local police officer Arun Kumar Singh said.

    “He was brought to the district hospital in a helicopter. His condition is stable,” Mr Singh said.

    “He has injuries on his left ankle and hand. His family is with him.”

    Mr Tamang was found in Nuwakot district about 80 kilometres north west of Kathmandu.

    Police also rescued three women from under rubble on Sunday in Sindupalchowk, one of the districts worst hit by the quake, although it was not immediately known how long they had been trapped.

    This was a calamity of enormous proportions and the relief operations have been a challenge given the resources we have.

    Nepalese information minister Minendra Rijal

    One had been buried by a landslide while the other two were under the rubble of a collapsed house.

    “They are being taken to hospital for treatment,” police officer Suraj Khadka said.

    On Saturday, Nepal’s government had ruled out finding more survivors buried in the ruins of Kathmandu.

    Multiple teams of rescuers from more than 20 countries have been using sniffer dogs and heat-seeking equipment to find survivors in the rubble of the capital.

    The government said the death toll from the earthquake had reached 7,040 and 14,123 people had been injured.

    A police team from Nepal pulled out the bodies of about 50 people, including some foreign trekkers, from an avalanche-hit area on Saturday, officials said.

    None of the bodies have been identified, deputy superintendent of police in the northern district of Rasuwa, Pravin Pokharel, said.

    Race against time to distribute aid

    Kathmandu’s tiny international airport has been operating round the clock to allow aid flights to land, but a shortage of parking space and damage to the runway has meant some aircraft have been turned away.

    The manager at the airport said large planes carrying relief supplies had been banned from landing because of pot holes on the runway.

    “This runway is the only lifeline for Kathmandu,” airport manager Birendra Prasad Shrestha said.

    “If it goes, everything goes.”

    Authorities announced that larger aircraft of 196 tonnes and over will not be allowed to land or take off because of the condition of the runway.

    This would mean a 747-size plane, full of emergency essentials, would not be able to get into Nepal.

    Some officials have denied reports of cracks appearing on the runway, saying the move to stop larger planes from landing is simply a precautionary measure.

    More than a week after the magnitude-7.8 earthquake, large swathes of the Himalayan nation have yet to receive any outside help as aid workers battle landslides, avalanches and a helicopter shortage to reach communities in some of the world’s most remote terrain.

    Relief workers have said it is now a race against time to get desperately needed shelter, food and clean water to survivors in the far-flung mountain villages flattened by the disaster before the monsoon rains begin in June.

    What we do know is that there is a lot more need out there than the places we are able to get to. Our priority now is really to try to reach those people, get immediate assistance to them.

    UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos

    But many of the worst-hit communities are tiny villages perched on the side of mountains that are inaccessible by road and where it is difficult or impossible for helicopters to land.

    The country’s poor infrastructure and a weak national government beset by in-fighting among coalition partners have compounded the difficulties of mounting a vast emergency relief operation in the world’s highest mountains.

    “One of the big challenges of working in Nepal, and we knew that this would happen should a major earthquake happen here, is the nature of the terrain,” the UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos said in Kathmandu.

    “There are a lot of villages which are on the top of hills, they’re quite small villages but there are no real roads that go up to those villages, and we know that there are quite a few areas like that because the epicentre is in a mountainous region.

    “It’s not been possible to land even small helicopters [in some places] because there have been landslides.”

    Indian Air Force pilot Avik Abhijit S Bali described how he had to abandon efforts to rescue survivors from a remote village in Gorkha, one of the worst-hit districts, because he could not land.

    “We tried for 20 minutes but there was no possibility of landing in a village that was on a slope and covered in debris from collapsed houses,” he said.

    The Nepal government has said it faces a severe shortage of both helicopters and heavy machinery to clear roads blocked by landslides.

    The army has just seven helicopters of its own and while India has lent the country another six for rescue and relief efforts it desperately needs more help to transport aid materials.

    “This was a calamity of enormous proportions and the relief operations have been a challenge given the resources we have,” information minister Minendra Rijal said.

    “We are putting all our resources into increasing the effectiveness of our relief efforts.

    “We have deployed people to reach every affected district by air, road or even on foot.”

    90 per cent of homes destroyed in worst-affected areas

    With authorities saying up to 90 per cent of homes in the two worst-affected districts have been destroyed, the United Nations said providing shelter was the priority.

    It estimates more than eight million survivors are in need of aid, and says it has received reports of desperate survivors clamouring to get on to helicopters evacuating the badly wounded from rural areas and forcing relief trucks off the road.

    “Remarkably, few modern, concrete, buildings have been affected in the capital,” said Nepal expert and former UN official John Bevan in a blog post this week.

    “In the countryside, however, most buildings are old, made of mud or weak bricks and stand on vertiginous slopes.

    “These are the remote hill villages which it would appear have borne the main brunt of the quake.”

    Ms Amos said there had been reports of some areas getting repeated aid deliveries, while others had still received nothing.

    “What we do know is that there is a lot more need out there than the places we are able to get to,” she said.

    “Our priority now is really to try to reach those people, get immediate assistance to them.”

    The government of landlocked Nepal has also faced criticism for holding up foreign relief deliveries at customs, with reports of aid trucks being turned away at the border with India because they did not have the correct documentation.

     

    Source: www.abc.net.au

  • 10 Singaporeans Still Missing In Nepal

    10 Singaporeans Still Missing In Nepal

    At least 10 people from Singapore are listed as missing in Nepal, following Saturday’s devastating earthquake.

    There are 1,765 people from all over the world listed on the online Red Cross registry Restoring Family Links, which allows people to leave details of family members and friends who are uncontactable in Nepal.

    Among those listed as missing is Singaporean Liang Kaixiang, 27, who was hiking in the Kangchenjunga region east of Nepal.

    His brother, investment banker Liang Yinwei, 30, said he last spoke to Kaixiang on April 20.

    “We think he’s fine, just uncontactable, and hope he will get in touch soon,” he said. “He’s quite far from the epicentre of the quake, and he did say he would be off the grid for a while.”

    Mr Liang, an adventure tourism graduate, is on a two-month hiking trip with his girlfriend Cheng Hui Yun, 27, who also cannot be reached, although she is not listed on the registry.

    Ms Maggi Ong also confirmed that she had not heard from her brother, Mr Hunter Ong, who is on the registry.

    The Straits Times was unable to contact the families of the eight remaining names still listed as missing.

    They are: Joanie Aw Yong, Jannah Suairi, Justin Ong, Lek Kai Ming, Ngiam Li Lian, Regina Matara Kalusayakkarage, Sanjit and Tan Chi Keong.

    Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) said yesterday: “While ground telecommunications pose severe challenges, MFA will keep in close touch with the Nepalese authorities and the next of kin of all Singaporeans in Nepal until they are accounted for.”

    A Crisis Response Team dispatched by the ministry has helped 89 Singaporeans and permanent residents get spaces on two departing RSAF C-130s yesterday. The team is also assisting Singaporeans who wish to leave at Kathmandu International Airport, by helping them secure seats on commercial flights, for instance.

    Said team leader Danial Phua: “The airport was very congested, and flights were delayed yesterday due to inclement weather and heavy air traffic.

    “Our Singaporeans were very calm and patient, and kept their spirits up under trying conditions.”

    The first RSAF plane was scheduled to arrive at Paya Lebar airbase at 12.45am this morning while the second was set to depart Kathmandu at 9.15pm yesterday.

    Meanwhile, a Singapore relief contingent will be at Sankhu village, about 50km outside Kathmandu. It is understood that the village was completely flattened by the earthquake, and that no other rescue team has reached the area yet.

    The 97-strong contingent consisting of 60 personnel from the Singapore Civil Defence Force, nine from the Singapore Police Force, and 28 from the Singapore Armed Forces, including 16 medics, is set to be there for two weeks.

    More aid is arriving from Singapore for the earthquake victims, as the situation becomes increasingly desperate, with rescue efforts hampered by blackouts, supply shortages and transportation difficulties, and a death toll expected to climb significantly.

    Singapore Red Cross said that people in Singapore have donated more than $200,000 to the effort.

    DBS Bank has said it will match dollar for dollar all staff donations to the Singapore Red Cross-Nepal Earthquake Relief Fund, and it has made it possible for customers to donate through DBS and POSB ATMs.

    Product manager Wanda Hu, 27, also started a fundraiser which aims to raise $100,000 for relief efforts.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Masjid Dan Yayasan Rahmatan Lil Alamin Pungut Dana Bantu Mangsa Gempa Bumi Nepal

    Masjid Dan Yayasan Rahmatan Lil Alamin Pungut Dana Bantu Mangsa Gempa Bumi Nepal

    Semua masjid di sini, dengan kerjasama Yayasan Rahmatan Lil Alamin (RLAF), akan menganjurkan satu usaha pungutan dana khas bagi membantu mangsa gempa bumi di Nepal.

    Orang ramai boleh memberi sumbangan menerusi wang tunai, cek atau secara dalam talian mulai hari ini.

    “… masyarakat Islam Singapura berdoa agar mangsa dan masyarakat di kawasan terjejas Nepal akan diberi kekuatan dan daya ketahanan untuk berhadapan dengan keadaan tragik dan mencabar ini,” kata RLAF dalam kenyataannya semalam.

    Cek harus dibuat atas nama ‘RLAF’ dengan kata-kata ‘Koleksi Khas bagi Mangsa Gempa Bumi di Nepal’ ditulis di belakangnya.

    Sumbangan dalam bentuk wang tunai dan cek harus dihantar ke Bangunan Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura (Muis) di Hab Islam Singapura di 273, Braddell Road, Singapore 579702.

    Sumbangan menerusi dalam talian boleh dibuat dengan melungsuri laman http://www.muis.gov.sg/Services/e-services.html.

    Di samping itu, kotak derma RLAF, yang ditandakan dengan kata-kata “Koleksi Khas bagi Nepal”, akan diletakkan di semua 68 masjid bermula Jumaat ini hingga Khamis depan.

    Sumbangan itu akan disalurkan kepada Mercy Relief, yang menghantar sebuah pasukan bagi memberi bantuan kepada mangsa di Nepal.

    Badan-badan lain turut mengadakan pungutan derma bagi membantu mangsa gempa bumi di Nepal.

    Ini termasuk Palang Merah Singapura (SRC) dan Badan Agama dan Pelajaran Radin Mas (Bapa).

    Angka korban akibat gempa bumi berukuran 7.8 skala Richter yang melanda Nepal pada hari Sabtu itu telah meningkat kepada 3,726 orang, kata seorang jurucakap polis Nepal.

    Pasukan penyelamat di Nepal masih meneruskan usaha mencari mangsa terselamat dalam kejadian dengan menggali sisa runtuhan di ibu kota Kathmandu.

    Tragedi itu juga menyebabkan mereka yang terselamat terpaksa bermalam di jalanan dan membuat khemah di kawasan terbuka.

    Situasi di hospital menjadi sesak sehingga pasukan perubatan terpaksa membina khemah di luar bangunan bagi merawat pesakit.

    Angkatan Bersenjata Singapura (SAF) telah mengerahkan tiga pesawat C-130 Angkatan Udara Republik Singapura (RSAF) bagi menghantar kumpulan pegawainya dan pegawai Pasukan Pertahanan Awam Singapura (SCDF) serta Pasukan Polis Singapura (SPF) melaksanakan usaha bantuan di Nepal.

    Bagaimanapun, Menteri Pertahanan, Dr Ng Eng Hen, menulis di Facebook semalam, berkata tiga pesawat tersebut tidak dapat mendarat di Kathmandu kerana kesesakan di Lapangan Terbang Antarabangsa Kathmandu Tribhuvan.

    Dua pesawat itu telah mendarat di Calcutta, India, dan satu lagi di Patna, India.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg