Death toll estimate in South Asia quake above 54,000 (AP) Updated: 2005-10-17 11:31
Heavy rains receded Monday in the Himalayan region of Kashmir, giving hope
that efforts could resume in full swing to bring aid to the millions of homeless
survivors of a monster earthquake that killed an estimated 54,000 or more.
In the town of Bagh in Pakistan's portion of Kashmir, the bodies of five
soldiers killed when their MI-17 transport helicopter crashed Saturday were lain
into simple wooden coffins for transport back to Islamabad.
The remains were located Sunday but could not be flown back immediately
because of the downpours. The body of the sixth soldier killed in the crash has
not yet been found.
Two strong aftershocks struck the region in the early morning, including one
with a magnitude of 4.5, but there was no immediate report of damage. There have
been hundreds of aftershocks since the main 7.6-magnitude earthquake on October
8, and experts say they could continue for months.
Officials on Sunday sharply raised estimates of the dead. Abdul Khaliq Wasi,
a spokesman for the local government of Pakistani Kashmir, which bore the brunt
of the quake, said at least 40,000 people died there and that the toll could go
much higher. Not all the bodies had been counted and the figure represented the
"closest estimate," he said.
That pushed estimates of the total death toll to more than 54,000, including
more than 13,000 in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province and about 1,350 in
the part of divided Kashmir that India controls.
Confirmation of a final death toll will be difficult because many bodies are
buried beneath the rubble. U.N. officials said that, so far, they were adhering
to the Pakistani government's confirmed casualty toll, which was 39,422 dead and
65,038 injured. The United Nations has estimated that 2 million are homeless.
Visiting a hospital in Islamabad, Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz said
some 1,000 injured children had been evacuated from the region for medical help,
primarily to the capital.
On Sunday, an aid worker with Pakistan's SUNGI Development Foundation was
killed when he accidentally walked into a helicopter's tail rotor while trying
to drive away a crowd as it prepared to leave Balakot to pick up more supplies,
state news agency APP reported.
Bagh is one of the worst-hit areas, and relief workers have been unable to
provide enough temporary shelters for residents, let alone for villagers who
have streamed in from the mountains. Mud rushed through the streets of the
shattered town like a river Sunday, and water saturated the fields used for
relief helicopter landings.
Maj. Gen. Farooq Ahmed Khan, the country's relief commissioner, said 29,000
tents and 118,000 blankets had been distributed in the quake zone. Khan had said
earlier that 100,000 tents were needed.
The army said medical supplies such as syringes, painkillers and antibiotics
were also needed, but asked donors to stop sending fresh water because most
affected areas had enough.
Though the aftershocks since the earthquake have caused little new damage,
they have been keeping people scared of going back into houses that survived the
initial quake.
"My house is full of cracks, and I won't go inside," said Bagh resident
Mumtaz Rathore, huddled under a plastic sheet with his wife and four children.
In cooperation between two longtime rivals, India gave Pakistan permission to
send relief helicopters into the 1.6 kilometer-wide (one mile-wide) no-fly-zone
on the Pakistani side of the cease-fire line that divides Kashmir.
India's Foreign Ministry said its third shipment of aid to Pakistan, some 170
tons of supplies including 100 tons of fortified biscuits, would arrive by train
in the country on Monday.
Many earthquake victims remain cut off by road.
"About 20 percent of the populated areas (in the quake zone) have yet to be
reached," said Geoffrey Krassy, a U.S. State Department official who was
redeployed to the quake zone from a mission in Afghanistan.
The Pakistani military said roads to several valleys remained closed by
landslides, and that it could take several weeks to clear them. In some areas,
Pakistani soldiers evacuated injured villagers by carrying them on their
backs.
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