A major earthquake hit a remote mountain region of Nepal on
Tuesday, killing at least 42 people, triggering landslides and toppling
buildings less than three weeks after the Himalayan nation was ravaged by its
worst quake in decades.
The magnitude-7.3 quake
hit hardest in districts northeast of the capital and terrified a nation
already shell-shocked and struggling after a more powerful quake on April 25
killed more than 8,150 and flattened entire villages, leaving hundreds of
thousands homeless.
AP report continues:
Information was slow to
reach Kathmandu after Tuesday's quake, but officials and aid workers said they
expected the death toll to rise. Within a few hours, the Home Ministry
confirmed that at least 42 people had been killed and at least 1,117 injured.
Meanwhile, it said
rescuers had managed to pull three people to safety in the capital, while
another nine were rescued in the district of Dolkha.
Rescue helicopters were
sent to mountain districts where landslides and collapsed buildings may have
buried people, the government said. Home Ministry official Laxmi Dhakal said
the Sindhupalchowk and Dolkha districts were the hardest hit.
Search parties fanned out
to look for survivors in the wreckage of collapsed buildings in
Sindhulpalchowk's town of Chautara, which has become a hub for humanitarian aid
since the magnitude-7.8 quake on April 25 — Nepal's worst recorded earthquake
since 1934.
Tuesday's quake was
deeper, however, coming from a depth of 18.5 kilometers (11.5 miles) versus the
earlier one at 15 kilometers (9.3 miles). Shallow earthquakes tend to cause
more damage.
The Tuesday quake was
followed closely by at least eight strong aftershocks, according to the U.S.
Geological Survey.
The international airport
in Kathmandu, which has become a transport hub for international aid, was
closed briefly after Tuesday's quake, while traffic snarled in the streets of
the capital.
Early reports indicated
at least two buildings had collapsed in Kathmandu, though at least one had been
unoccupied due to damage it sustained during the April 25 quake. Experts say
the April 25 quake caused extensive structural damage even in buildings that
did not topple, and that many could be in danger of future collapse.
Frightened residents who
had returned to their homes only a few days ago were once again planning to
sleep outdoors in empty fields, parking lots and on sidewalks Tuesday night.
"The shaking seemed
to go on and on," Rose Foley, a UNICEF official based in Kathmandu, said
after the latest quake. "It felt like being on a boat in rough seas."
Aid agencies were
struggling to get reports from outside of the capital.
"We're thinking
about children across the country, and who are already suffering. This could
make them even more vulnerable," Foley said.
Residents of the small
town of Namche Bazaar, about 50 kilometers (35 miles) from the epicenter of the
latest quake and a well-known spot for high-altitude trekkers, said a couple of
buildings damaged in the earlier earthquake collapsed Tuesday. However, there
were no reports of deaths or injuries in the town.
Meanwhile, new landslides
blocked mountain roads in the district of Gorkha, one of the most damaged
regions after the April 25 quake.
"People are terribly
scared. Everyone ran out in the streets because they are afraid of being inside
the houses," Norwegian Red Cross Secretary-General Asne Havnelid told
Norwegian broadcaster NRK.
At Kathmandu's Norvic
Hospital, patients and doctors rushed to the parking lot.
"I thought I was
going to die this time," said Sulav Singh, who rushed with his daughter
into a street in the suburban neighborhood of Thapathali. "Things were
just getting back to normal, and we get this one."
Nepalese have been
terrified by dozens of aftershocks that followed the April 25 quake. The
impoverished country has appealed for billions of dollars in aid from foreign
nations, as well as medical experts to treat the wounded and helicopters to
ferry food and temporary shelters to hundreds of thousands left homeless amid
unseasonal rains.
Paul Dillon, a spokesman
with the International Organization for Migration, said he saw a man in
Kathmandu who had apparently run from the shower with shampoo covering his
head. "He was sitting on the ground, crying," Dillon said.
Strong shaking was also
felt across northern India, with at least three people killed when rooftops or
walls collapsed on them in the state of Bihar. The state's disaster management
secretary said the deaths occurred in the districts of Patna, Vaishali and
Darbhanga, just across from Nepal's southern border.
The earth also rattled
across the Nepalese border in Tibet's Jilong and Zhangmu regions, and slight
tremors were felt in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa.
"Rocks fell from the
mountains," Jilong county government vice chief Wang Wenxiang was quoted
as saying by China News Service. "There might be some houses collapsed or
damaged." Authorities were assessing the damage further.
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