Los Angeles Times

Hope for more survivors dims as toll climbs in Nepal

An exodus from Katmandu Valley continues amid rescue and relief efforts.

- By Julie Makinen and Molly Hennessy-Fiske julie.makinen@latimes.com Twitter: @JulieMakLA­T molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com Twitter: @mollyhf Times staff writer Shashank Bengali and special correspond­ent Bhrikuti Rai in Katmandu and staff writer Alexandra

KATMANDU, Nepal — Hope of finding survivors in rubble was fading fast Wednesday as the death toll from last weekend’s earthquake in Nepal surpassed 5,200. But after days of complaints about the shortage of aid, a somewhat stronger presence of foreign searchand-rescue teams and assistance convoys was evident in the capital and outlying districts.

A logjam of airplane traffic and passengers began to clear at Katmandu’s airport, where authoritie­s said they had picked up 1.5 tons of trash from the overrun facility. Banks, restaurant­s and even souvenir shops began to reopen in the capital.

Thousands of people, though, continued to look for ways out of the Katmandu Valley, hitching rides on crowded buses and taxis. Many were returning to remote villages to assess the effects of the disaster. Staterun Radio Nepal said 200,000 people had already left the valley as of late Tuesday and another 200,000 may leave in the coming days.

That exodus could crimp the ability of private businesses and government offices to function. Government authoritie­s ordered civil servants to return to work Thursday, though schools and many other institutio­ns remained closed indefinite­ly.

Indian, Russian, French, Chinese and Nepalese search-and-rescue teams were working across the capital, trying to find survivors amid collapsed buildings. But four days after the magnitude 7.8 quake, chances of finding anyone alive were slim.

As the sun began to set, Deepak Damai stood on the edge of the Sobhavagba­ti Bridge in Katmandu, clutching a photo of his 5-year-old son and explaining his agony to a reporter from an Indian TV station. The boy and his mother were in their apartment on the third floor of a seven-story building that collapsed during Saturday’s quake.

Damai, who had been working in Dubai, flew home Monday to search for his wife and son. He watched with despair as Nepalese rescue workers drilled through the layers of concrete, pulling out four bodies. “Those people also lived on the third floor,” he said, his lip trembling.

Rescue workers had dug out 27 bodies so far and had three more levels to drill through. A police officer said they expected to find a large number of bodies on the lowest level, which had housed an athletic club.

About half a mile away, Indian, Russian and Nepalese teams were using dogs and listening devices to try to locate survivors from three collapsed buildings, including a church where 50 people had been worshiping at the time of the quake.

Subrate Charkrabor­tui, an Indian physician on the scene, was downbeat. One body had been pulled out Wednesday, he said.

“We could do much more if we had better equipment,” he said. “But it is difficult to airlift all the heavy equipment necessary to lift buildings like this.”

Still, there was at least one miraculous rescue: More than three days after the quake, a French team pulled a 27-year-old man from a collapsed three-story hotel.

“I had some hope but by yesterday I’d given up. My nails went all white and my lips cracked.... I was sure no one was coming for me. I was certain I was going to die,” Rishi Khanal told the Associated Press from his hospital bed.

By late Wednesday, the death toll in Nepal had reached 5,238, with more than 10,000 injured, according to government figures. Scores more were killed in neighborin­g India and China’s Tibet region.

The United Nations estimates that the disaster has affected more than 8 million people in Nepal, nearly a quarter of the population.

Tempers flared as Prime Minister Sushil Koirala toured Basantapur, one of the worst-hit areas in Katmandu. Some residents tried to block him from entering a square, furious that it had taken him days to visit, the local Kantipur publicatio­n reported.

The leader of Nepal’s Red Cross agreed with critics that the response so far was not ideal.

“The total operation is inefficien­t,” said Dev Ratna Dhakhwa, the agency’s secretary-general, as he surveyed the emergency response tent headquarte­rs in the capital, where volunteers were checking in from around the world before deploying Wednesday.

“There are many places we have not even been able to reach because it is so remote,” he said. “Even in accessible places here, we are not in a position to say we have reached everyone.... The magnitude is so great.”

The capital was in what he called the “panic phase” of recovery, with about 700,000 people displaced. Residents had initially been advised to return home after 72 hours, and the aftershock­s had apparently stopped. But many were still afraid to sleep indoors.

“We have nearly a quarter-million people still sleeping in the streets,” Dhakhwa said.

At a parking lot in central Katmandu, Ganandra Misrah, 37, and his family were catching the last bus of the night to their hometown in eastern Nepal after spending three days in a camp.

Misrah said he had watched the camp become progressiv­ely filthier and worried about his two children, ages 6 and 3.

“Refuse is here and there, bottles on the ground, a very dirty environmen­t. That’s why I worried about my children, about swine flu and other communicab­le diseases,” he said. “So we are leaving.”

 ?? Bernat Armangue
Associated Press ?? CLEANUP work is underway in Sakhu, on the outskirts of Katmandu, Nepal. In the capital and outlying areas, Nepalese and foreign search-and-rescue teams were working to find survivors amid collapsed buildings.
Bernat Armangue Associated Press CLEANUP work is underway in Sakhu, on the outskirts of Katmandu, Nepal. In the capital and outlying areas, Nepalese and foreign search-and-rescue teams were working to find survivors amid collapsed buildings.

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