A major earthquake hit a remote mountain region of Nepal on
Tuesday, killing at least 42 people while triggering landslides and toppling
buildings less than three weeks after the Himalayan nation was ravaged by its
worst quake in decades.
The Associated Press reported that the magnitude-7.3 quake
centered midway between the capital of Kathmandu and Mount Everest hit hardest
in districts northeast of the capital.
It terrified a nation already shell-shocked and struggling
after a more powerful quake on April 25 killed more than 8,150 and flattened
entire villages, leaving hundreds of thousands homeless.
Information was slow to reach Kathmandu after Tuesday’s
quake, but officials expected the death toll to rise as reports arrived of
people being buried under rubble, according to the U.N.’s Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
In Nepal, at least three people had been rescued in the
capital, while another nine pulled to safety in the district of Dolkha, the
government said.
Rescue helicopters were sent to mountain districts where
landslides and collapsed buildings may have buried people, the government said.
Home Ministry official Laxmi Dhakal said the Sindhupalchowk and Dolkha
districts were the worst hit.
People Flood Streets of Kathmandu Following Earthq …Play
videoPeople Flood Streets of Kathmandu Following Earthq …
Search parties fanned out to look for survivors in the
wreckage of collapsed buildings in Sindhulpalchowk’s town of Chautara, which
had become a hub for humanitarian aid after the magnitude-7.8 earthquake on
April 25, Nepal’s worst-recorded quake since 1934.
Nepal was left reeling by the April 25 quake. The
impoverished country appealed for billions of dollars in aid from foreign
nations, as well as medical experts to treat the wounded and helicopters to
ferry food and temporary shelters to hundreds of thousands left homeless amid
unseasonal rains.
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