Earthquake in Pakistan/International Relief/After Shocks (merged threads)

Re: Earthquake in Pakistan/International Relief (merged threads)

I emailed the PM of Canada regarding the air support for Pakistan, and I gotta favorable response. I talked to the local MPs office, and urged them precisely to expedite helicopter support for Pakistan as all the aid maybe useless unless air support is provided right away to actually deliver it, and ferry the injured back through difficult terrain. Allah has answered my prayers.

Whatever efforts you are making, please do it with the deep conviction of helping and fighting for the victims of this tragedy..

MUZAFFARABAD, Oct 12: Relief operations in earthquake-hit Azad Kashmir got into full gear on Wednesday with the help of US and German helicopters, but hundreds of thousands of survivors were still desperate for help facing a fifth night out in the cold.

Pakistani army spokesman Major Farooq Nasir said blue skies after torrential downpours on Tuesday had cleared the way for more mercy flights to bring badly needed food and medicine, and take away the injured.

“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,” Maj Nasir told AFP in the devastated capital of Azad Kashmir.

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.

Maj Nasir said 95 helicopter relief flights had brought vital supplies to the worst-hit regions of Kashmir over the past 24 hours, including 12 in the first few hours of daylight on Wednesday.

Witnesses said US army Chinook helicopters, diverted from the war against Taliban insurgents in neighbouring Afghanistan, could be heard over Muzaffarabad shortly after sunrise.

The World Bank said it was doubling its initial commitment to Pakistan to 40 million dollars.

The United Nations said a World Food Programme (WFP) convoy with 39 tonnes of high-energy biscuits arrived on Wednesday in Abbottabad while a second convoy carrying another 40 tons was en route to Muzaffarabad.

Meanwhile the UN High Commissioner for Refugees began distributing tents, plastic sheeting, mattresses, kitchen sets and other items from its warehouses in Peshawar.

The UN said the World Health Organization (WHO) deployed 11 surgical teams and one public health team to quake-hit areas.

Trucks started streaming into Muzaffarabad by mid-morning, clogging the streets and sparking fighting that police subdued with clubs.

Youths swarmed on one truck and looted it as soon as it stopped, throwing clothing and blankets to hundreds of outstretched hands. Men and women struggled for the goods, slapping, punching and throttling each other.

Answering Pakistan’s repeated appeals for helicopters, the United States was diverting choppers from military operations in Afghanistan and a UN official said Canada had offered funds to hire more aircraft.

Eight US military helicopters were already on the scene and four more were en route, a Pentagon spokesman said, as Washington made a special effort to demonstrate its willingness to help a major ally in the “war on terror”.

The search for survivors was also continuing even as hopes faded that anyone could still be alive beneath the rubble.

“For now we are concentrating on search and rescue. We’re coordinating with the Pakistani army as to when relief distribution will begin,” said a UN Disaster Assessment and Coordination spokesman.

Jan Vandemoortele, UN resident coordinator for Pakistan, admitted that some areas still had not seen a single relief worker due to the difficulty of accessing the mountainous terrain.

A UN report estimated that about 1,000 hospitals were destroyed by the quake.—AFP

it's so scary

... one quake after the other :(

lets all pray that these quakes come 2 an end now!

Re: it's so scary

nature ko reh reh ke maroor uth rahay hein :|

Re: Response and Aftermath of Pakistan Earthquake…

[quote=“DeSiMuNdA”]
politics and politicians…disgusting :yukh:

the response by all nations so far has been appalling…the private charties are doing better as it is…canada promising $300,000…QUOTE]

Canada gave $20 million.

Re: Thank you USA & Kuwait

Just don't turn back any plane bringing in blankets, medicine and desi MREs just because they come from India.

Re: Earthquake in Pakistan/International Relief (merged threads)

DART to be deployed to Pakistan
October 14, 2005
Ottawa, Ontario

Prime Minister Paul Martin announced today that the Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) will be deployed to the earthquake affected area of Pakistan. This decision follows an assessment and evaluation made by the team of experts from Foreign Affairs Canada, the Canadian International Development Agency and National Defence.

"This deployment will provide added value in response to the current crisis. Canada will act as quickly as possible to deploy the DART to help those in need," said the Prime Minister. "Coordination among relief agencies and with the Government of Pakistan are proceeding smoothly and I join the United Nations Secretary-General in calling on all donors to continue to support these efforts. This is a complicated relief operation, and it will be essential that we all ensure we are contributing to an effective overall response."

The DART will support existing medical infrastructure by augmenting medical staff and providing potable water. Details pertaining to the exact location of the DART will follow as a DART advance team arrives to clarify the technical elements of the mission.

On October 11, following a request from the Government of Pakistan, the Government of Canada deployed an evaluation and assessment team to Pakistan with the task of working with relevant authorities and international agencies to identify intermediate actions that Canada could take in support of relief and recovery efforts, including the possibility of deploying Canadian Forces assets such as the DART. The team has been in-country for the last forty-eight hours. They visited by helicopter some of the affected areas in Pakistan and met with a range of senior government and international organizations officials.

Foreign Affairs Minister Pierre Pettigrew, National Defence Minister Bill Graham and International Cooperation Minister Aileen Carroll have indicated their support of the Assessment team’s recommendation to the Prime Minister.

The help that Abu Dhabi & Dubai has provided…

After seeing the video of French experts rescuing a 5 year old after 3 days & now this,

http://www.gulfnews.com/Articles/WorldNF.asp?ArticleID=186746

my faith has renewed in the very basic fact that “Jissay Allah rakhay usay kaun chakhay”

Dear guppies,

The government of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Khalifa provided $100 million & 500 tents, in addition to that various other basic goods & relief supplies. Dubai has sent its rescue teams & UBL has setup the President Relief Fund. All the local radio stations are providing necessary details of how we can help Pakistan.

I’ve pledged my continuous support after looking at the generous support of Sheikh Khalifa. He & the government of Abu Dhabi & Al Ain have ALWAYS helped Pakistan whenever in need. Only certain individuals from Dubai have been helpful, although their help has been tremendously great.

Individuals who worked as private workers in Al Ain or Abu Dhabi were given financial assistance to return to Pakistan, to attend their injured relatives.

This world is filled with evil, but then only Allah’s power prevails & only He runs this world. If this world is alive its because of the few good people left in this world. May Allah bless them & grant them the highest status in the heavens. AmeeN summa AmeeN

Re: The help that Abu Dhabi & Dubai has provided…

Mal1k Jigar, ameen suma ameen :flower1:

Seeing that little boy just broke me down too :frowning:

Re: The help that Abu Dhabi & Dubai has provided...

Me too rally, I just couldnt control myself either

Re: The help that Abu Dhabi & Dubai has provided...

So i guess i am not alone when i cry, while watching the events unfold

Another earthquake ISB?

Could someone confirm. Was talking to a firend in ISB, and he mentioned earthquake and the line cut.

Re: Another earthquake ISB?

No harm done (so far). I finally got through and according to him, it was the strongest shock felt after the oct 8 quake. Says geo/ptv have put this in their breaking news. Epicenter around muzafarabad again.

Mods can del/merge with other thread(s).

Re: Another earthquake ISB?

*Aftershocks felt in Islamabad, other cities *
(Updated at 0635 PST)
ISLAMABAD: Different parts of country including Islamabad, Lahore and other parts of the country on early Wednesday forced the already panicked people out of their homes.

The magnitude of these aftershocks was more than those which were being felt so far after October 08, 2005’s massive earthquake hit various areas of Pakistan. Duration of these aftershocks was 15 to 20 seconds.

Source: Jang.com.pk

Re: Another earthquake ISB?

Info on “after shocks” from Oct 12 todate!



Date  Time  Description of Location        	Magnitude Depth (km) 	
 	

19th October 2005	02:33	Pakistan	5.8	10.00	More Details	
18th October 2005	21:20	Pakistan	5.3	10.00	More Details	
18th October 2005       21:19	Pakistan	4.5	10.00	More Details	
18th October 2005       18:32	Pakistan	4.5	10.00	More Details	
17th October 2005	10:43	Pakistan	5.1	10.00	More Details	
15th October 2005	06:52	Pakistan	4.4	10.00	More Details	
15th October 2005 	04:32	Pakistan	5.0	10.00	More Details	
15th October 2005 	04:24	Pakistan	5.1	10.00	More Details	
14th October 2005	19:37	Pakistan	5.2	10.00	More Details	
14th October 2005 	13:36	Pakistan	4.4	10.00	More Details	
14th October 2005 	10:18	Pakistan	4.3	10.00	More Details	
14th October 2005 	04:04	Pakistan	4.9	10.00	More Details	
14th October 2005 	02:52	Pakistan	4.0	10.00	More Details	
13th October 2005 	23:25	Pakistan	4.1	10.00	More Details	
13th October 2005 	22:53	Pakistan	4.9	10.00	More Details	
13th October 2005 	20:49	Pakistan	5.3	10.00	More Details	
13th October 2005 	20:23	Pakistan	4.8	10.00	More Details	
13th October 2005  	18:46	Pakistan	4.4	10.00	More Details	
13th October 2005  	17:08	Pakistan	4.4	10.00	More Details	
13th October 2005  	11:19	Pakistan	4.6	10.00	More Details	
12th October 2005  	20:23	Pakistan	5.4	10.00	More Details	
12th October 2005       06:35	Kashmir  	4.6	10.00	More Details	


Source : http://tsunami.geo.ed.ac.uk/local-bin/quakes/mapscript/demo_run.pl#

Re: Another earthquake ISB?

my brother in isb just told me that there were 2 earthquakes there today @ 5.6 and 5.8

with som many goods, here is something bad

Towers collapse: a botched rescue operation

** By Qudssia Akhlaque**
ISLAMABAD, Oct 16: Anger, anguish and disillusionment. These were the sentiments expressed by various volunteers conducting the search and rescue operations at the site of capital’s ill- fated Margalla Towers here in the last three days.

Most of these volunteers, young professionals and students, had rushed to the site minutes after the building collapsed and are still there, working tirelessly round-the-clock. Among them are doctors, helpers and trained rescue workers from Karachi’s civil defence.

Many people could have been saved, was their common outcry as they looked on helplessly at heavy-duty bulldozers and excavators ruthlessly clearing the rubble containing dead bodies and limbs on Sunday.

By now a large part of the rubble has been cleared and the operation is expected to end within the next 48 hours.

Over the last six days only dead bodies and limbs have been pulled out, some awfully decomposed and others beyond recognition. The death toll has now risen to 66. According to the official figure some eight people are reported missing but volunteers suspect that more may still be trapped in the car park that was in the basement.

The British rescue team left on Sunday and now only local volunteers are left behind.

On the eleventh day of the operation, now almost reduced to a clean-up exercise, these selfless volunteers were full of complaints and lament at the callous way the entire operation had been conducted. One by one they poured their hearts out, all bitterly critical of the role of the men in khaki and police force deployed there.

Many of them resented the fact that they were repeatedly prevented from taking the plunge into the rubble and combing through it for survivors. A young enthusiastic volunteer, Safdar Hashmi, who had brought out the first survivor, a Japanese woman, was particularly upset about it.

“They were more interested in going ahead with those killing machines than saving lives,” said an agitated volunteer on Sunday who literally had tears in his eyes. An equally disturbed volunteer, a federal engineering college student, said “they are messing it all up, there is no method to their madness.”

Another disgruntled volunteer said rather helplessly: “They are crushing the bodies inside the rubble with those machines and no one can stop them.”

Feroze Khan, a fire fighter from Karachi with 22 years of experience in search and rescue operations, who came here on his own initiative along with nine others, said it was criminal the way the rubble was cleared.

“They should have first lifted the slabs step by step with the cranes that were parked there instead of using cutters, digging in the concrete and hammering it down,” he said, pointing to the poor planning. These comments were an echo of the observations of three American experts who visited the site last week. Reportedly, one of them, shocked at the sight of the colossal machines on top of the debris digging so merciless, shouted: “What are these monkeys doing?”

Feroze Khan said his advice was ignored and he was abruptly told that the army engineering corps was capable of dealing with it. There were no takers for his plea that a professional rescue worker was better poised to save lives than army engineers whose expertise were building roads, bridges and blasting mountains.

Another professional rescue worker from Karachi pointed out that the incessant hammering compressed the concrete and closed the few openings that were there. “Many people must have died of suffocation as a consequence of this,” he added.

He asserted lives were also lost because of sheer mismanagement, saying there were good chances of bringing more people out alive as some children had been pulled out of the rubble alive in northern areas even after eight nine days.

A civil defence rescue worker who flew in from Karachi at his own cost on the second day of the disaster recounted the world record of a survivor pulled out of the rubble after eleven days in China.

Volunteers Waqas and Haroon said the officials of the engineering corps who supervised the operation turned a deaf ear to desperate pleas for halting the machines on many occasions when they detected voices of survivors from little openings in the rubble. At least two volunteers talked of a lady whose voice they had heard. She had reportedly signalled that she was OK and trying to make way for herself.

According to volunteers they had detected several other survivors who could not be brought out because a lot of time was wasted due to mismanagement of the commanding officers.

A doctor working for PIMS, who did not want to be named, disclosed that at one point an army officer approached her with a naked hand of some victim that he had picked from the rubble and asked her not to mention it to anyone and take it straight to the hospital. “I was furious and told him to show some respect and at least wrap it in a piece of cloth,” the doctor said.
**
“It is a pity that once the bodies of officials and well- connected individuals were brought out, all interest in others was diminished,” is how one volunteer put it.
**
Dr Naureen Malik, who has been at the site since day one said: “I had never ever imagined in my life that I would be asking people for so many kafans (funeral shrouds).”

http://www.dawn.com/2005/10/19/nat4.htm

strange isn’t it. with so many volunteers and some even professionals, their help and advice was not asked at all.

Re: with som many goods, here is something bad

truly sad.

Earthquake Death Toll Rises to 79,000/ strong aftershocks felt

MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan - Two strong aftershocks from South Asia’s deadly earthquake shook the devastated region on Wednesday, unleashing landslides and setting off another wave of panic among survivors who lost loved ones and homes in the Oct. 8 disaster. A new tally from regional officials pushed the death toll to 79,000.

Despite brisk sorties of helicopters delivering aid to quake victims, an estimated half-million survivors, many of them in Pakistan’s portion of Kashmir, have yet to receive any help since the monster 7.6-magnitude quake leveled entire villages. Thousands need urgent medical care.

The situation is the most dire in the estimated 1,000 settlements outside the main cities and towns, said regional U.N. disaster coordinator Rob Holden.

“Many people out there, we are not going to get to in time,” Holden said. “Some people who have injuries don’t have a chance of survival.”

On Wednesday, Asif Iqbal Daudzai, information minister for Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province, said 37,958 people died in the province and at least 23,172 were injured, the vast majority of them in Mansehra district. He said the figures were based on reports from local government and hospital officials, and that the toll was likely to rise.

The prime minister of neighboring Pakistani-held Kashmir, Sikander Hayat Khan, said at least 40,000 people died in that region. India has reported 1,360 deaths in the part of Kashmir that it controls.

Pakistan’s central government has said the death toll from North West Frontier Province and Pakistani-held Kashmir was a total of 42,000, and expected to rise. The central count has lagged behind the local count since the early days of the disaster.

Wednesday morning’s 5.8-magnitude aftershock struck 80 miles north of Islamabad, near the epicenter of the main quake, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. It was followed by another in the same area about 45 minutes later that registered 5.6.

The first aftershock caused a landslide in Balakot, one of the cities hardest hit by the initial quake. Debris covered the road to nearby Mansehra, but it was quickly cleared, said Pakistani Army Lt. Col. Saeed Iqbal, who is in charge of relief efforts in the area.

A landslide also blocked a road out of Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani Kashmir, but it was expected to be cleared quickly.

Iqbal said the aftershock was “very heavy” and that he saw dust rising from the Kaghan Valley north of Balakot, possibly indicating an additional landslide.

In Indian-held Kashmir, the new tremors startled thousands of people in relief camps, including those in the worst-hit Uri and Tangdar districts close to the boundary with Pakistan-held territory. Police said there were no reports of landslides or damage to buildings.

Hundreds of aftershocks have struck the region since the Oct. 8 quake.

“They’re not over,” said Waverly Person, a seismologist at the U.S. quake center. “For a shallow-depth earthquake like this they go on, sometimes for a year.”

In Balakot, villagers scavenged for food, clothes or building material.

“We need help,” said resident Basim Qassir. “There’s been deliveries, but it’s just not enough.”

On a tour of Balakot, President Gen. Pervez Musharraf said he expected reconstruction of the area to take years, and that the government would try to get prefabricated homes for victims.

In Beijing, the U.N.'s top relief coordinator on Wednesday said the international community was not doing enough to help and should step up relief efforts.

Jan Egeland, U.N. undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, urged China to help because it borders the hard-hit area of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir and has a stockpile of winterized tents.

Egeland asked China for 20,000 tents, 10 helicopters and as much cash as possible — hinting at $20 million. Beijing, a close ally of Pakistan, has already pledged $6.2 million directly to Islamabad and sent tents, blankets, water purifying tablets, rescue equipment and a search team.

India was mulling Pakistan’s proposal to help quake victims in Kashmir by allowing residents to cross the frontier that divides the disputed territory between them, the latest sign of cooperation between the nuclear-armed rivals since this month’s disaster.

India, which has sent quake relief supplies to Pakistan, hailed the plan but said it was awaiting details.

Also on Wednesday, residents of Indian-controlled Kashmir made the first phone calls to the Pakistani side of the Himalayan territory in 15 years, trying to find out what’s become of loved ones since the massive South Asian quake, police said.

New Delhi cut communications between its Jammu-Kashmir state and all of Pakistan in 1990 in an effort to stymie an Islamic insurgency there that it charged was being run from Pakistan, an allegation Islamabad denies. Pakistanis can, however, still make direct calls to Indian Kashmir.

At least 54,000 people died in the disaster, most of them in the Pakistani-held part of divided Kashmir. The toll includes 1,361 deaths reported by India on its side of the militarized boundary separating the Himalayan region.

Lets pray that all this has an end. May Allah forgive our sins and give those who lost everything patience and grant jannat to all those who lost their lives amin :flower1:

Re: Another earthquake ISB?

it’s so scary :crying:

im so worried about my papa and brother. May Allah protect us all and forgive our sins amin.

Re: Earthquake Death Toll Rises to 79,000/ strong aftershocks felt

Right from the second day after the quake, I figured it was going to be close to, or over a 100k. I was hoping that I would be wrong.