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Pakistan relief effort swings into gear as skies clear
10/13/2005
 

          MUZAFFARABAD, (Pakistan), Oct 12: Relief operations for millions of earthquake survivors swung into gear Wednesday as the skies cleared and helicopters laden with food and shelter began thundering in to devastated northeast Pakistan., report agencies.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was due later Wednesday to arrive in Pakistan to inspect the devastation after Saturday's earthquake which killed at least 23,000 people and left millions more homeless, hungry and cold.
"I do want to affirm with the Pakistani people that the international community and the US are with them in this terrible time," said Rice, who is in Afghanistan as part of a tour of Central Asia.
The rains that lashed northeast Pakistan Tuesday, halting crucial airlifts and aid deliveries, have dried up but the misery continued for some 2.5 million homeless survivors who are in desperate need of help as winter arrives.
"That was the fourth night we slept in the open," said Khurshid Bibi, pointing to her family of 15 camped on the roadside outside their collapsed house in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan's side of divided Kashmir.
"We were very, very cold. We need tents and blankets," she said after waking up to see snow had fallen on the peaks surrounding the ruined city of 125,000 which has been reduced to piles of crushed concrete.
Pakistan has appealed for international aid including helicopters to respond to the catastrophe, the worst natural disaster in the country's history, which obliterated whole towns and villages.
"We are bringing in food, blankets, tents, and rescue teams. The weather has cleared so we're going full ahead now with the relief operations," Pakistani army spokesman Major Farooq Nasir said in Muzaffarabad which bore the brunt of the 7.6-magnitude quake.
Eight United States choppers have been diverted to Pakistan from military operations in Afghanistan and the Pentagon said that up to 30 eventually could be sent in a major boost to the relief effort.
US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns has also called for Washington's NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) allies in Afghanistan to pitch in.
"It is certainly our strong hope that those allies step up with the provision of equipment especially," he said, noting that Pakistan needed earth-moving equipment and choppers which are vital for reaching remote areas. Pakistan said the death toll from Saturday's quake has hit 23,000, although relief agencies believe when the rubble is cleared and more bodies are found the toll could rise as high as 40,000.
Another 60,000 have been injured. On the Indian side of divided Kashmir, officials said the death toll had hit 1,300 with 40,720 homes completely destroyed and another 10 villages still cut off. Indian troops were also battling rain and snow to deliver aid to tens of thousands of survivors on its side of the de facto border of Kashmir, traversing the mountainous region with tents and food.
Towns and villages across northern Pakistan and parts of Kashmir have turned into makeshift refugee camps, with shocked survivors huddling under whatever they can find as they wait for aid that many say has been too slow coming. But on Wednesday the thumping twin-rotors of giant US army Chinook helicopters could be heard over Muzaffarabad from shortly after sunrise, bringing vital relief to the worst-hit regions.
The search for survivors is also continuing even as hopes fade that anyone could have remained alive for so long beneath the rubble of destroyed schools and homes. Pakistan's Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz appealed to the international community to send more money, tents and medicines, and then heavy equipment to help rebuild shattered communities.
The United Nations has issued a "flash appeal" for more than 270 million dollars to add to the hundreds of millions already pledged by the international community.
India, Pakistan's longtime rival, sent 25 tonnes of supplies Wednesday in the first such aid delivery in decades which analysts say bodes well for the fledgling peace process between the nuclear neighbours.
Meanwhile: Rain, which brought misery to victims of Pakistan's earthquake, saved the life of an elderly man rescued alive from the rubble after 80 hours, a rescuer said Wednesday.
The man, in his 70s, survived by drinking rain water that seeped through into the debris of a three-storey building in which he was trapped, said a member of a British team that pulled him out late Tuesday in Muzaffarabad.
Hopkins' 15-strong team of search and rescue specialists, all volunteers who are paying their own way, were Wednesday back at the building in the Upper Adda section of Muzaffarabad hoping to find other survivors.
"There's still hope," said Hopkins.
Experts say 72 hours is about the window for surviving without food or water in the sort of conditions prevailing in quake-hit Muzaffarabad.
Meanwhile: Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz said Wednesday relief operations in the wake of the Pakistani earthquake soon would have to switch from rescue to "rehabilitation" as winter approached.
Speaking to reporters on his first trip to this city since it was almost completely wiped out in Saturday's quake, Aziz also said more must be done to help the victims.
"At the moment we are in a relief and rescue phase. The third phase is rehabilitation... We have to think of the winter which is just around the corner," he said over the wailing of an infant at a relief centre here.
"So we are now working in a parallel track to provide people a place to stay where they can face winter, and this is ... all over the affected area."
The Pakistani government has said 23,000 people are confirmed to have died in the 7.6-magnitude quake and another 2.5 million were made homeless.
Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, bore the brunt of the calamity.
Meanwhile: Intelligence officials and former guerrillas Wednesday said the giant earthquake that killed tens of thousands across divided Kashmir has dealt a blow to rebels in the Himalayan region.
Indian intelligence officials, citing intercepted radio traffic between various guerrilla groups, said rebels in the Pakistani zone of the state were badly hit.
About 70 earthquake-related rebel deaths were confirmed by Jamaat-ud-Dawa, formerly the outlawed jihadi group Lashkar-e-Taiba.
The LoC, a heavily-militarised ceasefire line, divides Kashmir between rivals India and Pakistan. Thousands of Indian soldiers guard its snow-blown ridges to prevent Islamist guerrillas from sneaking across.
The Muslim rebels, who launched an armed struggle against Indian rule disputed Kashmir in 1989 that has claimed at least 44,000 lives, are normally active in the summer months when alpine passes are clear of snow.

 

MUZAFFARABAD: Eighty-year-old earthquake victim Bibi Jaitun (front) rests on a cot under the open sky among the rubbles of her collapsed house as her daughter Khurshid Bibi looks on in Muzaffarabad Wednesday, four days after a powerful earthquake shocked the region. — AFP photo
 
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