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Anger in Nepal over slow pace of relief efforts

International aid struggled to find its way to the needy in remote areas due to bad weather and lack of coordination

An Injured person receives treatment outside the Medicare Hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal

Press Trust of India Kathmandu
Frustration mounted among people in quake-hit Nepal over the slow pace of relief efforts as international aid struggled to find its way to the needy in remote areas today due to bad weather and lack of coordination.

Nearly five days after the quake shook the Himalayan nation, international aid workers are still stuck in Kathmandu, even as urgent help is required in remote villages yet to be reached.

Saturday's quake killed more nearly 6,000 people, and injured at least 11,000. The UN says more than eight million people have been affected by the quake.

As the rescue and relief operations have become centered in Kathmandu Valley, other affected districts remain in dire need of trained manpower to undertake search activities.
 
All foreign rescue teams, except a team from Britain, are deployed in Kathmandu Valley, media reported.

A local public health worker said the government's delay in providing direction and information is impeding urgent relief efforts in remote districts.

Minendra Rijal, Nepal's minister of information and communications, said relief operations were underway but that much more needs to be done.

"Life is returning to normal, but it will be some time to be completely normal," he said.

"We have still not been able to properly manage to provide relief," he said.

Foreign assistance has poured in, but aid organisations said capacity constraints at the capital's single-runway airport, fuel shortages, quake damage to roads and the mountainous country's difficult terrain were all impeding efforts to help quake victims.

Hospitals in the capital were overflowing with patients, and doctors said they needed medicines and surgical equipment.

And large numbers of people, afraid to go back into quake-damaged buildings, were living outdoors.

"We are living in hell," said a Nepalese man, who expressed anger at how his government has responded to areas devastated by the earthquake.

"We will die if there is no help from the government or other organisations," another man said.

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First Published: Apr 30 2015 | 12:13 PM IST

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