Nepalese dig for quake survivors as deaths exceed 2,200
RESCUERS dug with their bare hands and bodies piled up in Nepal yesterday after an earthquake devastated the heavily crowded Kathmandu Valley, killing more than 2,200 people, and triggered a deadly avalanche on Mount Everest.
A big aftershock between Kathmandu and Everest unleashed more avalanches in the Himalayas. In the capital, hospital workers stretchered patients out onto the street to treat them as it was too dangerous to keep them indoors, Reuters reported.
“Another one, we have an aftershock right now. Oh shit!” said Indian climber, Arjun Vajpai, over the phone from Makalu base camp near Everest. “Avalanche!” he shouted. Screams and the roar of crashing snow could be heard over the line as he spoke.
The tremor, measured at 6.7, was the most powerful since Saturday’s 7.9 quake – itself the strongest since Nepal’s worst earthquake disaster of 1934 that killed 8,500 people.
The aftershock rocked buildings in the Indian capital, New Delhi and halted the city metro.
“There is no way one can forecast the intensity of aftershocks, so people need to be alert for the next few days,” said L.S. Rathore, chief of India’s state-run weather office.
In Everest’s worst disaster, the bodies of 17 climbers were recovered from the mountain yesterday after being caught in avalanches. A plane carrying the first 15 injured climbers landed in Kathmandu at around
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