Ottawa Citizen

A MIRACLE AMIDST TRAGEDY

Teen survives 5 days in quake rubble

- TODD PITMAN

KATHMANDU, NEPAL The 15-year-old boy had been buried alive under the rubble of this quake-stricken capital for five days, listening to bulldozers clearing mountains of debris, fearful the incessant aftershock­s might finally collapse the darkened crevice where he was trapped.

And then, “all of a sudden I saw light,” Pempa Tamang said, recounting the moment Thursday he was pulled from a hole at the bottom of what was once a sevenstore­y building in Kathmandu.

Tamang did not know whether he was alive or dead. “I thought I was hallucinat­ing,” he said.

The improbable rescue was an uplifting moment in Nepal, which has been overwhelme­d by death and destructio­n since the 7.8-magnitude earthquake hit Saturday. By late Thursday, the government said the toll from the tremor had risen to 6,130 dead and 13,827 injured.

After night fell, police reported another dramatic rescue: A woman in her 20s, Krishna Devi Khadka, was pulled from a building in the same neighbourh­ood.

“Life has become a struggle to survive. It gives us hope,” said Hans Raj Joshi, who watched Tamang’s rescue. “We thought they were only bringing out the dead. It’s hard to believe people are still alive.”

When Tamang was finally extricated, rescue workers inserted an IV in his arm, put him on a yellow plastic stretcher — the same kind that has helped convey countless dead — and carried him through the ruins on their shoulders as if he was a newly crowned king. A dazed Tamang, wearing a shirt with the Yankees logo, blinked at the sky.

When the procession entered the main road outside, there was a sound Kathmandu hadn’t heard in days: the jubilant cheers of thousands of ecstatic onlookers.

Nepal, however, is far from normal. More than 70 aftershock­s have been recorded in the past five days.

Shortages of food and water and worry over the fate of relatives have triggered an exodus from the capital, prompting thousands to board buses provided by the government to travel to their rural hometowns.

Tamang he looked weak and tired but otherwise fine as he recounted his story in an Israeli field hospital.

When Saturday’s quake began at 11:56 a.m., Tamang said he was having lunch with a friend in the hotel where he worked. As he ran down stairs, they shook. He saw walls cracking, ceilings caving in. He was in the basement when “suddenly the building fell down. I thought I was about to die,” he told reporters.

For days, Tamang survived on two cans of ghee, or clarified butter. He rested his head on chunks of concrete and a piece of corrugated aluminum roof.

It took hours to carefully clear the way for Tamang to be lifted out. Members of a U.S. team brought in equipment, and lowered a polemounte­d rotatable camera into the hole, said team member, Andrew Olvera. Looking at a pair of ripped concrete floors hanging like curtains on the side of the destroyed building, just above the rescue site, Olvera said the operation was dangerous. But, “it’s risk versus gain. To save a human life, we’ll risk almost anything.”

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 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Nepalese police carry earthquake survivor Pemba Tamang on a stretcher after his rescue Thursday from a destroyed hotel building in Kathmandu, five days after the devastatin­g earthquake.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Nepalese police carry earthquake survivor Pemba Tamang on a stretcher after his rescue Thursday from a destroyed hotel building in Kathmandu, five days after the devastatin­g earthquake.

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