| Quake toll jumps to estimated 35,000(AP)
 Updated: 2005-10-11 21:25
 
 Even longtime foe India planned to send a planeload of food, tents and 
medicine after Pakistan set aside its often-bitter rivalry with its nuclear 
neighbor and said that it would accept New Delhi's aid. Islamabad, however, 
declined an offer of Indian helicopters. 
 Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh described the earthquake in Kashmir as a 
national calamity, saying the government will spare no expense to help the 
survivors. 
 Singh said India's death toll had reached 1,300, with another 4,500 injured 
and 32,000 houses were damaged. 
 "Whatever is necessary, whatever is needed to rehabilitate, whatever is 
needed for relief, the central government stands committed to help," he said. 
Singh earlier announced another $111 million in assistance in addition to the 
$26 million already promised by his government for relief in the Himalayan 
territory. 
 President Gen. Pervez Musharraf said his government was doing its best to 
respond to the crisis. 
 "We are doing whatever is humanly possible," Musharraf said. "There should 
not be any blame game. We are trying to reach all those areas where people need 
our help." 
 In Muzaffarabad, a doctor, Iqbal Khan, said survivors were at risk for 
diarrhea and pneumonia if drinking water and other supplies did not arrive 
quickly. 
 In the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, rescuers continued digging through the 
ruins of a 10-story apartment building after pulling a woman and child to 
safety. Asim Shafik, who was assisting in rescue efforts, said voices were heard 
in the rubble, where at least two dozen people died. 
 
 
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