Story highlights
Death toll in Nepal rises to 1,910, government official tells CNN
NGO official says people will urgently need food, water, medicine and shelter
People treated outside hospitals; avalanches reported on Everest
Whole streets and squares in the capital
of more than 1 million people were covered in rubble. Stunned residents
stared at temples that were once part of their daily lives and now were
reduced to nothing.
Locals and tourists ferreted through
mounds of debris in search of survivors. Cheers rose from the piles when
people were found alive -- but mostly bodies turned up. The injured
ended up being treated outside overflowing hospitals, where crowds of
people gathered looking for relatives.
Dozens of bodies were pulled from the
historic nine-story Dharahara tower that came crashing down during the
quake. At least 17 people were reported killed on Mount Everest, where
the quake caused multiple avalanches.
A seemingly endless series of aftershocks
continued to roil the area, further traumatizing survivors. Residents
huddled in the cold rain overnight for safety.
The death toll of 1,910 -- provided Sunday
by Laxmi Dhakal, an official at the Nepalese Ministry of Home Affairs
-- is expected to rise as the full extent of the damage is assessed.
The loss of life reported so far "is
really based on the information we have from the main cities," Lex
Kassenberg, Nepal country director for CARE International, told CNN.
"But if you look at the spread of the earthquake a lot of the rural
areas have been hit as well. The information we received from the field
is that 80% of the houses in these rural areas have been destroyed."
News out of remote areas near the quake's
epicenter, where many more may have died, has been scant. Most of the
homes in the secluded Latang Valley, have been destroyed an official
there said.
In accessible cities, many hills of rubble have yet to reveal all the bodies of people inside of buildings, when they collapsed.
The quake was the strongest in the region
in more than 80 years. Residents are used to earthquakes in Nepal, and
many thought the start of Saturday's quake was a tremor, until the earth
kept shaking and buildings crashed down.
"The reports of the devastation are still
coming in and the numbers of people killed, injured and affected by this
earthquake continue to rise," said U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
in a statement. "It is clear that very many lives have been lost."
'Utterly terrifying'
An estimated 4.6 million people in the
region were exposed to tremors from the Nepal earthquake, the United
Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said via
Twitter. Thirty out of 75 Nepal districts were affected by the quake.
In neighboring Tibet, roads buckled,
buildings collapsed and at least 13 people were killed, China's state
media reported, citing local authorities.
Separately, at least four Chinese citizens
in Nepal -- two workers with a Chinese company, a tourist and a
mountaineer -- have been killed, state media reported, citing the
Chinese Embassy in Kathmandu.
Officials in India confirmed at least 34 deaths in three states from the Nepal quake.
The quake struck at 11:56 a.m. local time
(2:11 a.m. ET) and was centered less than 50 miles northwest of
Kathmandu. It occurred at a depth of 9.3 miles, which is considered
shallow and more damaging than a deeper quake. It was reported by people
in the area as having lasted a long time. One person said he felt as if
he were on a ship in rough seas.
Kathmandu sits in a valley surrounded by the Himalayas.
Siobhan Heanue, a reporter with ABC News
Australia, told CNN she was wandering at an ancient temple complex at
the moment of the earthquake. Several temples collapsed around her, she
said.
"It's not too often you find yourself in a
situation where you have to run for your life," Heanue said, adding
that she sought shelter under the table of a cafe. "It was utterly
terrifying."
Devastating loss of people, history
Heanue watched as residents picked through the rubble of a destroyed temple. They found 12 bodies.
"Unfortunately, that search was not
fruitful," Heanue said. "There were 12 bodies at least pulled from the
rubble in the square. This was just one of several historical temple
complexes severely affected by the earthquake."
The Dharahara tower, the landmark
nine-story structure, was packed with people when it collapsed. Heanue
said at least 50 bodies were pulled from the ruins of Dharahara.
The tower, built in 1832, provided visitors with a panoramic view of the Kathmandu Valley.
Are you in Nepal or have loved ones affected? Please share with us if you are in a safe place.
Kanak Masni, a journalist in Kathmandu,
told CNN by telephone that this appeared to be "the most massive
earthquake to hit central Nepal since 1934." In that quake, which was
8.1 magnitude and centered near Mount Everest, more than 10,000 people
were killed.
Thomas Nybo, a freelance photographer, was
sitting in a coffee shop in Kathmandu's Thamel district. It appeared to
be a minor tremor at first but gradually gained intensity, he told CNN.
Thousands poured onto the streets of the densely populated tourist hub.
"This region is no stranger to
earthquakes," he said. "A lot of people had the same feeling: This is a
tremor, it passed. When that wasn't the case, they were in uncharted
territory... It's basically an unwritten book."
Outside the coffee shop, Nybo said he saw a
group of women gather near what had been a six-story building. One
woman said children were trapped beneath rubble.
"We ran over and ran around the rubble and couldn't hear anything," he said. "There was no chance that they survived."
Nearby, another building had come down on
an area where locals went to do laundry and collect water, Nybo said. A
voice was heard coming from the rubble.
"A group of mainly tourists started
gathering rocks, hammers and pickaxes and breaking through a re-enforced
concrete wall to reach this guy... It took about two hours of smashing
through wall and cutting rebar with a hacksaw to pull him out alive."
Two bodies were found near the spot where the man was rescued, Nybo said. Not far away, lay the bodies of three or four women.
"Who knows how many other bodies lie beneath the rubble?" he said.
People 'shaken, upset, crying'
The streets of Kathmandu were packed with
thousands of locals and tourists who didn't want to go back to their
homes or hotels because of recurring aftershocks.
Rob Stiles and his wife had just checked into a hotel in Kathmandu when the earthquake struck.
"It felt like it went on forever," the California resident said.
Witnesses: "People are panicked, running down to street"
Outside, people ran onto the street, with
the temblor knocking some off their feet. A huge section of a brick wall
crushed motorcycles and a car.
Later, as they walked around the city, an aftershock hit.
"People were screaming and looking around," he said. "There were people clearly shaken, upset, crying."
Denis McClean, spokesman for the U.N.
Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, told CNN that weak building codes in
Nepal contributed to the amount of structural damage.
"Building codes in Kathmandu itself have
not been well upheld in recent years," he said. "Efforts have been made
over the last few years to strengthen these building codes but,
unfortunately, this comes too late for the many thousands of buildings
that have gone up across the Kathmandu Valley over the last 20 years
that did not adhere to the building codes."
Chitra Thapa, 48, a CNN security guard in
Atlanta, said he spoke by telephone with relatives in Kathmandu and
Pokhara, a city about 125 miles (200 kilometers) west of the capital.
They were fine and were staying on streets.
"Everybody's in shock," he said. "They never felt an earthquake that big."
Aid agencies expressed concern for the
welfare of survivors in the coming days, as overnight temperatures were
expected to drop and people were forced to make do without electricity,
running water and shelter.
The international community must react
quickly to save lives -- particularly those of children -- said Devendra
Tak, of the aid agency Save the Children.
"With every minute the situation becomes worse," he said.
Food, clothing and medicine will be urgently required, Tak said.
The U.S. government is providing $1
million in immediate assistance to Nepal, the U.S. Embassy in Nepal
said. American disaster response teams are also on their way to Nepal,
the Embassy said via Twitter.
"To the people in Nepal and the region
affected by this tragedy we send our heartfelt sympathies," Secretary of
State John Kerry said in a statement. "The United States stands with
you during this difficult time.
How to help the earthquake victims
At a hospital in the Nepalese capital,
people with broken bones and head injuries were lying outside, with
doctors administering CPR to at least one of them. Residents with
scrapes and lacerations were turned away for those in need of more
urgent care.
Fast Facts on earthquakes
The U.S. Geological Survey had at first
measured the strength at magnitude 7.5 but later upgraded it. A strong
aftershock of magnitude 6.6 was recorded a little more than a half-hour
afterward, along with nearly three dozen other aftershocks, the USGS
reported.
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