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BEIJING, Oct. 11 (Xinhuanet) -- Rescuers in Pakistan battled on Tuesday to dig out more
victims as donor countries rushed doctors, paramedics, medicine, food and
sniffer dogs to the quake-hit south Asian country.
Desperate Pakistanis, many of them with bare hands, are battling to save thousands
of people trapped in rubbles across the wide region.
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| A Pakistani woman cradles her injured daughter while waiting for rescue along with thousands of residents in the completely destroyed town of Balakot. (AFP) | Nearly two days after the disaster, more survivors have been found and
pulled from the ruins. Injured people were airlifted from remote areas, and the
troops distributed rice to hungry survivors.
On Monday, the troops and French team rescued 40 children and retrieved 60 bodies
from the rubbles of a school that collapsed in the massive earthquake in
Balakot, a scenic town in northwestern Pakistan, according to a Pakistani
television station.
In the capital of Islamabad, a British rescue team pulled out an Iraqi
child and his mother in the rubble, where many European, Arab and Japanese
nationals were still missing after the quake destroyed the two apartment blocks.
Fearing more earthquakes, thousands of survivors outside the capital have
been sleeping in the open areas, in cars or in tents,despite the night's cold
and rain. Many lit fires using wood from collapsed houses.
In Muzaffarabad, capital of Pakistan-ruled Kashmir, officials said all its
government and educational institutions have been destroyed, and relief efforts
were hampered by landslides.
"Bodies are scattered in the city," said Masood-ur Rehman, an assistant
city commissioner.
"Ninety percent of victims are still buried under the debris. We are
helpless. The city is out of order," he added.
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf said his government is trying its best
to deal with the disaster and to save more lives.
"We are doing whatever is humanly possible," Musharraf said, "There should
not be any blame game. We are trying to reach all those areas where people need
our help."
Pakistan on Monday expressed thanks to the international community for the
quick response to its call for help after Saturday's 7.6-magnitude earthquake
killed more than 20,000 people.
"We are overwhelmed by the international community's response to our appeal
for the help for Saturday's quake victims," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Tasnim
Aslam said at a news conference.
Meanwhile, world leaders stepped up pledges of support, sending more
experts, food, medicines and other relief supplies to the hardest-hit country.
Among the Asia-Pacific countries, China Monday provided the second batch of
emergency commodities, which consists of 840 tents,7,350 quilts and 1,670
blankets, to the neighboring country after the first batch was transported to
Islamabad.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao also expressed China's willingness to provide
assistance to the governments of Pakistan, India and Afghanistan, in a meeting
with envoys from the three quake-hit neighbors.
Chinese leaders have sent condolences to the leaders of Pakistan and India
and swiftly made the decision of offering 6.2 million US dollars-worth of relief
aid to Pakistan. A rescue team from China arrived in Pakistan on Monday and
immediately embarked on rescuing efforts.
Washington has also pledged to offer helicopters and up to 50 million US
dollars in aid to Pakistan, a key ally in the US-led war against terrorism.
"We have under way the beginning of a very major relief effort," said Ryan
Crocker, US Ambassador in Islamabad.
More flights carrying rescuers and aid were expected from Russia, Iran,
Japan, South Korea and dozens of other countries.
In a gesture of solidarity with Pakistan, India said it decided to send a
planeload of emergency relief supplies to Islamabad.
The quake, South Asia's strongest in 100 years, has also killed almost 700
in India-controlled Kashmir.
"We plan to send (various) relief items, including tents, plastic sheets,
mattresses, blankets, food items, medicines and medical supplies in a transport
plane on Tuesday. It should reach Pakistan latest by Tuesday evening,"
Indo-Asian News Service quoted India's Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran as saying
Monday.
Saran said that Indian Prime Minister had directed that a consignment of
(relief) items should be put together on an urgent basis and delivered to
Pakistan at the earliest.
This is probably the first time an Indian plane will carry relief materials to Pakistan, a five decade-long foe of New Delhi.
Pakistan's Foreign Ministry said on Monday that Pakistan would accept
India's relief aid. Enditem |