(Reuters) -
Thousands of desperate Nepalese spent another night in the open in the
early hours of Monday, terrorized by strong aftershocks that continued
to shake the country two days after a massive quake struck, killing
almost 2,500 people. Across the capital, Kathmandu,
and beyond, exhausted families whose homes were either flattened or at
risk of collapse laid mattresses out on streets and erected tents to
shelter from rain. The sick and wounded also lay out in the open, unable
to find beds in the city's overwhelmed hospitals. Outside Kathmandu Medical College, surgeons set up an operating theater inside a tent. People
queued for water dispensed from the back of trucks, while the few
stores still open had next to nothing on their shelves. Crowds jostled
at one pharmacy to snap up medicine. High in the Himalayas, hundreds of foreign and
Nepalese climbers remained trapped after a huge avalanche killed 17
people in the worst single disaster to hit Mount Everest. A
total of 2,460 people were confirmed killed in the 7.9 magnitude quake,
making it the worst such disaster to hit Nepal since 1934 when 8,500
died. Thousands more were injured. The
death toll is likely to climb as rescue workers struggle to reach
remote regions in the impoverished, mountainous country of 28 million
people and as bodies still buried under rubble are recovered. With
so many people sleeping in the open with no power or water and
downpours forecast, fears mounted of major food and water shortages.
Across the country, hundreds of villages have been left to fend for
themselves. "We are overwhelmed with rescue and assistance
requests from all across the country," said Deepak Panda, a member of
the country's disaster management. Several countries rushed to send aid and personnel. India
flew in medical supplies and members of its National Disaster Response
Force. China sent a 60-strong emergency team. Pakistan's army said it
was sending four C-130 aircraft with a 30-bed hospital, search and
rescue teams and relief supplies. A
Pentagon spokesman said a U.S. military aircraft with 70 personnel left
the United States on Sunday and was due in Kathmandu on Monday.
Australia said it was sending a specialist urban search and rescue team
to Kathmandu at Nepal's request. Britain,
which believes several hundred of its nationals are in Nepal, said it
was delivering supplies, medics and search and rescue teams. But
there has been little sign of international assistance on the ground so
far, with some aid flights prevented from landing by aftershocks that
closed Kathmandu's main airport several times on Sunday. AVALANCHE TERROR In
the Himalayas, hundreds of climbers were still feeling tremors on
Sunday powerful enough to send snow and boulders cascading toward them. The
huge and deadly avalanche on Saturday triggered by the earthquake
caused panic at Everest base camp, a sprawling "city" of tents from
where mountaineers set off for the world's highest peak. "It
was a monstrous sound, like the demons had descended on the mountain,"
Khile Sherpa, a Nepalese guide, told Reuters, recalling the moment the
avalanche hit. He was one of the
lucky few airlifted to the relative safety of Kathmandu, although
hospitals there were overflowing and hundreds of patients had to wait
outside to be treated. The disaster
has underlined the woeful state of Nepal's medical facilities. The
country has only 2.1 physicians and 50 hospital beds for every 10,000
people, according to a 2011 World Health Organization report. "The
earthquake has exposed that Nepal's best public hospital infrastructure
has crumbled at a time when it should serve more people in a hurry,"
said Sarvendra Moongla, a senior surgeon at Bir Hospital's Trauma Centre
in Kathmandu, which opened in February. At
the Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital, bodies, including that of a
boy aged about seven, were heaped in a dark room. The stench of death
was overpowering. Outside, a 30-year-old woman who had been widowed wailed: "Oh Lord, why did you take him alone? Take me along with him." COUNTING THE COST Rajiv
Biswas, Asia Pacific chief economist at business research firm IHS,
said long-term reconstruction costs in Nepal using proper building
standards for an earthquake zone could be more than $5 billion, or
around 20 percent of the country's GDP. "With
housing construction standards in Nepal being extremely low ... the
impact of the earthquake has been devastating based on initial reports,"
he said in an early analysis of the likely damage. In crowded Kathmandu, many buildings were flattened or badly damaged. Nepali
army officer Santosh Nepal and a group of rescuers worked all night on
Saturday to open a passage into a collapsed building in Kathmandu. They
used pick axes because bulldozers could not get through the ancient
city's narrow streets. "We believe
there are still people trapped inside," he told Reuters, pointing at
concrete debris and twisted reinforcement rods where a three-storey
residential building once stood. Among
the capital's landmarks destroyed in the earthquake was the 60-metre
(200-foot) Dharahara Tower, built in 1832 for the queen of Nepal.
Desperate Nepalese sleep in open as aftershocks spread fear

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