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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Third night in the cold for Afghan-Pakistan quake survivors
By Sajjad Qayyum
Shangla, Pakistan (AFP) Oct 28, 2015


Pakistan quake survivors help themselves in race against winter
Chitral, Pakistan (AFP) Oct 28, 2015 - Digging through the rubble of an earthquake less than three months after being devastated by floods, residents of the northwestern Pakistan district of Chitral cannot afford to wait for government help.

With temperatures already plummeting as winter fast approaches, there is no time to delay.

Sleeping under the sky at night and relying on food from neighbours, they are helping each other to rebuild in the wake of Monday's powerful 7.5 magnitude tremor, which ripped across Afghanistan and Pakistan and killed 370 people.

"Children are forced to sleep under the open sky in the cold weather," Kesu village resident Islah-ud-Din told AFP Wednesday.

"But nobody has arrived to help them," he said, adding that their misery is unlikely to be over soon with winter just around the corner.

"We won't wait for authorities to come," said 29-year-old driver Lal Jan.

"People here are helping each other... people whose houses survived in the quake provide food and shelter to those who are affected. We all are helping each other to clear rubble from our houses."

Weeks of heavy rain caused havoc in the area in July, killing at least 38 people in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa of which Chitral is a part.

Thousands were evacuated and dozens of roads and bridges in Chitral were swept away.

Then came the tremor. Once again Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has emerged as the worst-hit province, though the scale of the devastation in Chitral is only just becoming clear.

Of the 180 houses in his village of Langa, 70 were completely destroyed and many others damaged, local councillor Jamshed Alam told AFP.

"No government support has arrived so far, neither has any NGO approached us," the 35-year-old said.

"The local government started its survey to assess damage only yesterday, and nothing else. People are trying to help themselves recover.

"Many people, whose houses were destroyed or became too risky to live in, sleep under the open sky in the night.

"They have nothing to cook and eat and are relying on the food provided by neighbours and fellow villagers."

In Chitral city most people had already managed to repair their partially damaged homes, but in the surrounding rural areas many were still clearing rubble.

Even houses that survived the jolt developed cracks.

Islah-ud-Din sees himself as one of the lucky ones. He was in his shop when the quake hit but rushed outside.

"As soon as I got out, I heard a huge bang and then there was dust everywhere. After 10 minutes when the dust cleared, I saw both of my shops had been flattened and my father was crying sitting beside me."

His house, however, survived intact.

Jan the driver, the only breadwinner for his family of 10, had a four-room house which collapsed.

"Now we have nothing to eat, cook, wear or sleep because all our kitchen items, clothes and bedding have been buried under the rubble."

Entire communities of earthquake survivors in Afghanistan and Pakistan were spending a third night without shelter in plummeting temperatures Wednesday, with fears growing for children sleeping in the open as rescuers struggled to reach remote mountainous regions.

Rugged terrain, severed communication lines and an unstable security situation have impeded relief efforts since Monday's 7.5 magnitude quake ripped through the region, triggering landslides and flattening buildings. More than 380 people have been killed.

Desperate victims appealed for blankets, warm clothes and food after the quake levelled thousands of homes, forcing many to camp out in the open.

"Winter is coming and soon there will be snow everywhere, the children won't survive the cold," Shahroon, a resident of Usiak village in Chitral district in the worst-hit province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, told AFP Wednesday.

Shahroon, who goes by one name, said children in his family as young as four were sleeping outside.

"If we stay here the kids will die... we have lost everything already and can't afford to see these children die in front of us, they are the only valuables we have now."

If the government can help them rebuild before the snow comes they will stay, he said -- but "otherwise we will go to Rawalpindi or Peshawar or any other city and spend our lives begging on the roads".

Pakistan's confirmed death toll stood at 267 with more than 1,800 people injured and 11,000 homes damaged, and authorities warn that the number could spike with many isolated regions still cut off.

"Shelter and hygiene will be most likely the main needs, as it is already snowing in some of the more mountainous areas," said Shelagh Woods, country representative for medical charity MSF in Pakistan.

The UN children's agency UNICEF warned that children in the earthquake-hit areas "are facing further deadly threats as extreme conditions and insecurity cut off communities from aid".

"The earthquake has carried away the roofs of our houses," 70-year-old grandmother Gul Subhana told AFP tearfully in a village in Shangla district.

"Where do we live?"

- Taliban threat -

Western charities said the Taliban presence in Afghanistan was hindering relief efforts.

The militants on Wednesday claimed to have overrun the remote district of Darqad in the quake-hit northern province of Takhar, underscoring the fragile security situation facing relief workers.

The insurgents on Tuesday had urged aid organisations not to delay in delivering relief, and vowed their fighters would provide "complete help" in affected areas.

Afghan officials said 115 people were confirmed dead and hundreds more injured, with casualties reported from around half a dozen of the country's 34 provinces, and more than 7,600 homes reported damaged.

Desperate survivors were left marooned on mountaintops in Badakhshan, the remote province where the epicentre was located and where much of the territory is controlled by the Taliban.

The quake was centred near Jurm in northeast Afghanistan, 250 kilometres (160 miles) from the capital Kabul and at a depth of 213.5 kilometres, the US Geological Survey said.

Aid agencies have stressed the need for greater disaster preparedness in war-torn Afghanistan, which remains extremely susceptible to recurring natural disasters such as floods, earthquakes and landslides.

But disaster planning has been a low priority for the nation struggling to end a 14-year war against the Taliban insurgents.

- Call to action -

The military has been leading Pakistan's rescue efforts, sending in medical teams, tents and rations and evacuating some people by helicopter.

In some remote districts, however, residents said that with winter fast approaching they could not afford to wait for aid and were instead helping each other rebuild.

"We won't wait for authorities to come," said 29-year-old driver Lal Jan in the district of Chitral in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which has seen the bulk of the dead and injured.

"People here are helping each other... people whose houses survived in the quake provide food and shelter to those who are affected. We all are helping each other to clear rubble from our houses."

Rescue work has begun in the district of Kohistan, which had been cut off from authorities Monday and Tuesday.

Kohistan police official Javed Khan told AFP that at least 12 people had been killed in the province and some 350 houses damaged.

"Rescue work has been started but on a limited scale. We are constantly receiving reports of damages from far-flung inaccessible areas."

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who visited Peshawar Wednesday before heading to Chitral, announced a compensation package for those who lost their homes, saying it would be fast-tracked ahead of winter.

But critics in Pakistan said authorities have still not learnt from the catastrophic quake of October 2005, which killed more than 75,000 people and displaced some 3.5 million.

"We know we are in an earthquake-prone zone," said an editorial in The News daily, stressing the need for greater preparedness.

"A failure to act now will be deadly in the future."

burs-st/fa


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Previous Report
DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Relief agencies battle to reach Afghan-Pakistan quake victims
Islamabad (AFP) Oct 28, 2015
Relief agencies were battling Wednesday to reach cold and hungry survivors of a devastating earthquake that has killed more than 360 people in Pakistan and Afghanistan, with entire communities still cut off in the mountainous region. Desperate victims appealed for aid after Monday's 7.5 magnitude quake ripped through the region, destroying thousands of homes, triggering landslides and stampe ... read more


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