Los Angeles Times

Nepal quake toll mounts

Deaths are reported in India as well. Troops continue searching for U.S. military copter.

- By Shashank Bengali and Bhrikuti Rai shashank.bengali @latimes.com Twitter: @SBengali Times staff writer Bengali reported from Mumbai, India, and special correspond­ent Rai from Katmandu. Special correspond­ent Parth M.N. in Mumbai contribute­d to this repor

KATMANDU, Nepal — Authoritie­s in Nepal on Wednesday raised the death toll from a magnitude 7.3 aftershock to 91 people as troops combed a remote district northeast of Katmandu for a U.S. military helicopter that was missing with eight people aboard.

More than 2,400 people were injured in the Tuesday afternoon quake, the largest of a series of aftershock­s centered in Nepal since a massive April 25 temblor, according to police officials.

An additional 17 people died in northern India, according to local news reports, 16 of them in the state of Bihar.

U.S. military officials said a UH-1Y Huey aircraft, which was participat­ing in relief operations, went missing Tuesday in the Charikot area near the quake’s epicenter. The aircraft was carrying six U.S. service members and two Nepalese soldiers, said Capt. Cassandra Gesecki, spokeswoma­n for the 3rd Marine Expedition­ary Brigade.

The aircraft was attached to Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 469, based at Camp Pendleton.

Nepal’s army was told that the helicopter may have gone down in a river and had mobilized 400 soldiers to aid in the search, a Nepalese army official told Reuters news agency.

Gesecki said reports that the helicopter had been found were “just rumors.”

“There’s been no confirmed communicat­ion” with the aircraft, she said, adding that there was no indication it had crashed.

The earthquake Tuesday was centered 47 miles northeast of Katmandu, close to the Chinese border, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. It unleashed landslides in parts of northern Nepal hit hard by last month’s magnitude 7.8 quake, which killed more than 8,150 people and flattened or damaged hundreds of thousands of buildings nationwide.

Many families fled their homes Tuesday night and slept in the open in Katmandu, the capital, and elsewhere. In the Tundikhel area of Katmandu, 11-year-old Bhim Magar awoke Wednesday to find that many of his older family members had gone to fetch belongings from their house, believing they would not return there for several days.

“We were rolling on the ground because it was shaking so violently,” the boy recalled.

Schools, which were due to reopen this week, will be closed until later in the month, Nepalese officials announced.

The latest quake struck after Prem Kumari, 24, had just returned to her home in the densely populated area around Katmandu’s New Road with her husband and 2-year-old daughter. They had spent the last two weeks sheltering in a playground.

Kumari spent Wednesday night at Tundikhel under a tarpaulin sheet with dozens of other families. Her husband, a porter, had just returned to his job over the weekend, and she was again afraid that he would lose his job.

“I am even more scared now. The bricks falling from my room almost struck us yesterday,” she said, holding her daughter. “How long will we have to camp out again?”

Aid workers in Sindhupalc­howk, the district east of Katmandu that was hit the hardest by last month’s quake, said new landslides had severely restricted access to affected villages. One village where aid workers from the CARE internatio­nal relief organizati­on were distributi­ng aid Tuesday did not have a single home left standing, said Lucy Beck, a CARE spokeswoma­n.

“A lot of the roads that weren’t already ruined or affected by landslides now are,” Beck said. “Our team was able to drive up to the village before the aftershock, but afterward had to hike back three hours to an open part of the road.”

With the annual monsoon rains expected to begin in weeks, Beck said, Nepalese in affected villages are in immediate need of proper shelter and hygiene kits.

“People are desperate for tarpaulins,” she said. “Hygiene and sanitation are a major need because the recent quake destroyed latrines and household supplies.”

In India’s Bihar state, 16 people were reported killed. Aid workers in the area said buildings were damaged in the state capital, Patna, 200 miles south of Katmandu, and many families spent the night at a sweltering park after authoritie­s declared a 48hour state of alert because of fear of more aftershock­s.

The Indian nonprofit Rashtra Seva Dal, which works in Bihar, said 12 people died in the Darbhanga district, which borders Nepal. Cracks that had appeared in houses from the April quake have widened, and more now seem on the verge of collapsing, aid workers said.

A dozen students were reportedly hurt when their school collapsed in Darbhanga, the Hindustan Times newspaper reported.

“This has added to the ongoing relief work from the last earthquake,” said Sachidanan­d Singh of Rashtra Seva Dal. Fortunatel­y, he said, electricit­y, water and phone lines were functionin­g.

 ?? Mast Irham
European Pressphoto Agency ?? SURVIVORS of Tuesday’s 7.3 aftershock line up for food in Katmandu, Nepal’s capital. The quake killed 91 in Nepal and 17 in India.
Mast Irham European Pressphoto Agency SURVIVORS of Tuesday’s 7.3 aftershock line up for food in Katmandu, Nepal’s capital. The quake killed 91 in Nepal and 17 in India.

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