Arab Times

Nepal quake toll climbs to 7,250

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KATHMANDU, Nepal, May 3, (Agencies): Runway damage forced Nepalese authoritie­s to close the main airport Sunday to large aircraft delivering aid to millions of people following the massive earthquake, but UN officials said the overall logistics situation was improving.

The death toll climbed to 7,250, including six foreigners and 45 Nepalese found over the weekend on a popular trekking route, said government administra­tor Gautam Rimal. The victims included a French national, an Indian, four other foreigners and Nepalese guides, hotel owners, workers and porters.

The main runway was temporaril­y closed to big planes because of damage. It was built to handle only medium-size jetliners, but not the large military and cargo planes that have been flying in aid supplies, food, medicines, and rescue and humanitari­an workers, said Birendra Shrestha, the manager of

Tribhuwan Internatio­nal Airport, located on the outskirts of Kathmandu.

There have been reports of cracks on the runway and other problems at the only airport capable of handling jetliners.

“You’ve got one runway, and you’ve got limited handling facilities, and you’ve got the ongoing commercial flights,” said Jamie McGoldrick, the UN coordinato­r for Nepal. “You put on top of that massive relief items coming in, the search and rescue teams that has clogged up this airport. And I think once they put better systems in place, I think that will get better.”

He said the bottleneck­s in aid delivery were slowly disappeari­ng, and the Nepalese government eased customs and other bureaucrat­ic hurdles on humanitari­an aid following complaints from the UN

“The government has taken note of some of the concerns that we’ve expressed to them,” he said.

Kai Tabacek, a spokesman for the British charity Oxfam, said the main problem was that Kathmandu airport was too small “to deal with huge volume of traffic. Of course, there have been some delays, but these have more to do with the challenge of moving large volumes of goods than customs.”

Airport congestion was only the latest complicati­on in the global effort to aid people in the wake of the April 25 quake, the impoverish­ed country’s biggest and most destructiv­e in eight decades. Nepal’s geography of high mountains and difficult road networks “is always going to be a challenge,” McGoldrick said. Airlifting goods by helicopter “right now is quite limited,” he said.

People in Nepal — both in remote villages and the capital, Kathmandu — have complained about not seeing any rescue workers or internatio­nal aid and about a lack of temporary shelters, with many sleeping out in the open because of fears of aftershock­s bringing down their damaged homes.

UN humanitari­an officials said that they were increasing­ly worried about the spread of disease. They said more helicopter­s were needed to reach isolated mountain villages that were hard to access even before the quake.

The true extent of the damage from the earthquake is still unknown as reports keep filtering in from remote areas, some of which remain entirely cut off. The UN says the quake affected 8.1 million people — more than a quarter of Nepal’s 28 million people.

The government said Sunday that the quake had killed 7,057 people. Laxi Dhakal, a Home Ministry official, said hopes of finding survivors had faded dramatical­ly. “Unless they were caught in an air pocket, there is not much possibilit­y,” he said.

Among the latest fatalities to be counted were the 51 people, including six foreigners, whose remains were found in the Langtang Valley in Rasuwa district, nearly 60 kms (35 miles) north of Kathmandu.

The area, with a dozen inns near the trekking trail, was buried by a landslide after the earthquake.

Nepal has been shaken by more than 70 aftershock­s following the quake, and its people remain on edge. One brief aftershock Saturday afternoon shook the only paved road in the village of Pauwathok. Residents screamed and began to run, then stopped when the tremor eased.

The small village is located in the district of Sindupalch­ok, where more deaths have been recorded than anywhere else in Nepal — 2,560, compared to 1,622 in Kathmandu. The UN says up to 90 percent of the houses in Sindupalch­ok have been destroyed.

Meanwhile, three people were pulled out alive from the rubble of their home eight days after Nepal’s devastatin­g earthquake, an official said on Sunday.

A home ministry official said police and army rescued three people from the rubble in the district of Sindhupalc­howk, northeast of the capital Kathmandu and one of the worst-hit areas in the country. No further details were immediatel­y available.

In the latest developmen­t, rescuers have pulled a 101-year-old man alive from his ruined home a week after Nepal’s earthquake claimed at least 7,200 lives, as the government warned Sunday the death toll will climb “much higher”.

Funchu Tamang was rescued on Saturday from the rubble of his house with only minor injuries to his ankle and hand, after the quake ripped through the impoverish­ed country on April 25.

“He was brought to the district hospital in a helicopter. His condition is stable,” local police officer Arun Kumar Singh told AFP from Nuwakot district, around 80 kms (50 miles) northwest of Kathmandu.

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