earth quake

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~dipsominiac~

Age: 124
Total Posts: 2352
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Pakistan, Pakistan


Police and rescue workers at the site of a building that collapsed in Islamabad.




THIS IS MARGALLA TOWERS F-10 SECTOR ISLAMABAD.
A 10 STORY BUILDING WHERE THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE WERE LIVING AND DUE TO HOLIDAY IN SCHOOLS COZ TODAY IS SATURDAY ALMOST ALL OF CHILDREN WERE AT HOMES. SO WOMEN AND CHILDREN WERE THERE.... THESE ARE LIVING APARTMENTS...at the time of earth quake almost 200 people where inside






Toll rises in major Pakistan quake

Saturday, October 8, 2005; Posted: 4:00 a.m. EDT (08:00 GMT)


(CNN) -- At least 19 people were killed and hundreds more injured when a magnitude 7.6 earthquake centered near Islamabad, Pakistan, jolted residents of three countries as far as 400 miles away.

Frantic efforts to rescue survivors were underway in Islamabad, where an apartment building collapsed.

Elsewhere in Pakistan, preliminary reports indicate "widespread damage," particularly in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir and the country's northern area, Maj. Gen. Shauket Sultan, Pakistani army spokesman, told CNN.

But communication disruptions in those areas meant information was sketchy, he said. A helicopter rescue operation was launched.

Fourteen of those killed were in Pakistan, including a girl killed when her school was damaged in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad. Four others died in Manshera and nine in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir and the country's northern region, authorities said.

Police in Indian-controlled Kashmir reported five deaths -- three in the town of Baramulla and two in Srinagar. Also, about 150 people have gone to Srinagar hospitals with a combination of physical injuries and shock, police said. Nearly 200 houses in the region have been damaged by the quake.

Initial reports from Islamabad indicate that a two-block area was damaged, Pakistani Information Minister Shaikh Rashid Ahmad told CNN.

Video footage from Pakistani television showed crowds of people climbing on the rubble of the collapsed apartment building and attempting to free those trapped under large concrete slabs. Some of the injured were carried away on stretchers.

The temblor's epicenter was 60 miles (about 100 kilometers) north-northeast of Islamabad and more than six miles below the Earth's surface, according to the Web site of the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information Center.

The quake, which struck about 8:50 a.m. local time (11:50 p.m. Friday EDT, 3.50 a.m. Saturday GMT), was believed to be the strongest in Pakistan in nearly 20 years. Many citizens were still in their beds at the time.

"My wife and I grabbed our daughter and ran outside immediately," Danny Kemp, deputy Islamabad bureau chief for Agence France-Presse, told CNN. Pine trees and light poles were shaking, he said. "I've never felt anything like it."

The quake was "quite shallow," said David Applegate, senior science advisor for earthquake and geologic hazards for the U.S. Geological Survey. "That means the shaking is going to be very intense."

The fact that Islamabad was near the epicenter "means a fairly large urban population has experienced some strong shaking," Applegate said.

There have been some initial aftershocks, he said, "and we expect quite a number more" -- some in the 6-plus magnitude range. Those aftershocks could cause additional damage to structures already weakened by the first quake, he said.

The largest of those, which struck less than an hour after the strongest quake., was measured at magnitude 5.9, according to the National Earthquake Information Center. Others included two 5.6-magnitude quakes and one at 5.4 magnitude, the center said.

Pakistan traditionally has been an active region for earthquakes, Applegate said. Saturday's quake was a "thrust" earthquake, caused by friction between the Indian subcontinent as it pushes against Asia. Although it is the same kind of mechanism that creates tsunamis, the quake was centered far enough inland that there was no danger of a tsunami, he said.

Aftershocks could continue for several days before beginning to decrease, Applegate said.

The quake was also felt in India and Afghanistan. In New Delhi, some 400 miles from Islamabad, buildings swayed and furniture moved, causing widespread panic among residents, many of whom rushed into the streets.

A 7.6 quake is classified as "major," according to the scale used by the center.

Japan's Meteorological Agency judged the quake's magnitude as a 7.8.

In February 2004, a pair of earthquakes registering 5.5 and 5.4 magnitude, respectively, killed at least 21 people and injured dozens more and destroyed hundreds of homes built of mud, stone and timber in a rugged, mountainous area about 90 miles northwest of Islamabad.

In January 2001, some 30,000 people died in a 7.7 quake in western India.

CNN Senior International Correspondent Satinder Bindra, CNN Producer Syed Mohsin Naqvi and Journalist Mukhtar Ahmed in Srinagar contributed to this report.
Posted 08 Oct 2005

~Fragi~ says
Allah sab ko himat sey is aafat ka mukabla karney kee himaat dey
Posted 12 Oct 2005

BadShaH1 says
Ameen
Logon ka jazba himmat dekh key daad deni perti hey
and aaj apney hathon sey 1000's collect kiey relief fund key liey.
Posted 12 Oct 2005



my parents donated a few hundrad dollars yesterday, n im also thinkin 2 donate a few of my pocket money
Posted 12 Oct 2005

~Fragi~ says
hey jazba janooon tu himat na haar
Posted 12 Oct 2005

Posted 13 Oct 2005

BadShaH1 says
hanji
gr8 people to fly with.
Posted 14 Oct 2005

Posted 14 Oct 2005

MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan - Pakistan on Friday called off the search for survivors of last week's devastating earthquake to concentrate on helping the millions left homeless. Aid workers rushed to set up makeshift villages before the onset of the fierce Himalayan winter.

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Maj. Farooq Nasir, an army spokesman, said the chances of finding any survivors in the rubble a week after the quake were "very slim."

International rescue teams prepared to pull out, and relief workers held mass burials for those found too late.

In Islamabad, police launched a criminal investigation of the builders of an apartment building that collapsed during the quake, killing at least 40 residents, police chief Sikandar Hayat said. The 10-story building was the only structure that collapsed in the capital.

"We will arrest all those who didn't perform their duty well," he said. "They might be the builders, contractors or supervisors."

Supply flights landed at an airfield outside Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, through the night, including a     NATO jet that brought in eight tons of blankets, tents and sleeping bags from Slovenia.

A rescue team working urgently to save a trapped 22-year-old woman in Muzaffarabad was forced to halt operations after a frightening aftershock jolted parts of Pakistan. The woman died before the rescuers were able to resume work.

Saturday's 7.6-magnitude earthquake wiped out entire villages in Pakistan's portion of the disputed Himalayan region of     Kashmir and killed more than 35,000, including many children buried under collapsed schools. India has reported more than 1,350 deaths in the part of Kashmir it controls.

Thousands of survivors spent a sixth night outdoors. At least 2 million people are homeless and face increasingly harsh weather, according to the     United Nations. Snow has begun to fall in some parts of Kashmir.

Jan Egeland, the U.N. undersecretary-general and emergency relief coordinator, flew by helicopter to the Kashmiri city of Muzaffarabad, where he said millions of people urgently needed food, medicine, shelter and blankets.

"I fear we are losing the race against the clock in the small villages" cut off by blocked roads, Egeland said. "I've never seen such devastation before ... every day the scale of devastation is getting wider."

The U.S. military was preparing to send a 36-bed Mobile Army Surgical Hospital — or MASH — from Germany. A water purification detachment would also be sent, the U.S. military said.

Pakistan's federal relief commissioner, Maj. Gen. Farooq Ahmad Khan, said the country expected to have 2 million blankets and 100,000 large tents on hand to establish makeshift villages before the onset of winter. The quake wiped out 200,000 houses for 2.3 million people, he said.

New Zealand doubled its earthquake aid to $1 million as the "seriousness of the situation in Kashmir and the northern regions of Pakistan continues to grow," Aid Minister Marian Hobbs said.

About 100 Japanese troops and two military transport planes carrying a helicopter and a power-supplying vehicle left to help with relief efforts, officials said.

A relief team from Britain-based Plan International flew a helicopter carrying water, juice and milk to villages in the Mansehra district of North West Frontier Province and said people were hungry and panicking.

"Conditions are going from bad to worse," said Dr. Irfan Ahmed, the aid group's health adviser. "These people don't have any shelter. Also the school has collapsed, and the children were in those classrooms."

Another Britain-based group, ActionAid International, said its workers tried to reach remote mountainous areas, but had to get out of their truck and walk because of bad roads and traffic jams.

"The problem is that people are facing a shortage of time," said Shafqat Munir, a spokesman for the group. "It's cold, raining. People are without shelter. They have food, clothes, blankets, but tents are a problem."

A 5.6-magnitude aftershock Thursday was centered 85 miles north of Islamabad, near the epicenter of Saturday's 7.6-magnitude quake that demolished whole towns, mostly in Kashmir and northwestern Pakistan. It shook buildings, but there was no significant damage in an already demolished region.

A milder aftershock hit the same area Thursday night, and another early Friday morning, with no immediate reports of damage.

There have been more than 60 aftershocks higher than magnitude 5, including one that registered 6.4, and nearly 500 in total since Saturday's quake. Experts said they could go on for months.

In Muzaffarabad, relief workers wrapped 35 bodies in shrouds and carried out a mass burial on Thursday. The burial was coordinated by Jamat-e-Dawad, a group linked to Islamic militants that is operating dozens of ambulances in the city and running a camp for quake victims.

International teams that have staged extraordinary rescues in recent days said chances of saving more lives were remote. Some prepared to pull out.

"No one is giving up, but it is the acceptance that the actual real chances of finding someone alive are almost nil," said Rob Holden, the team leader for U.N. disaster assessment and coordination.

Posted 14 Oct 2005

Posted 14 Oct 2005

now jo log zinda hain..unke liye house built karien
Posted 14 Oct 2005

hmmmmm
Posted 14 Oct 2005

abrar ul haq ne aik khoti isb wali di hai,,,wohan log reh sakte hain
Posted 14 Oct 2005

gud

Allah sab ko himat day
ameen suma ameen
Posted 14 Oct 2005

Allah khair kary
ameen sum ameen
Posted 14 Oct 2005

ya bus ALLAH sab ki madad karay
Posted 14 Oct 2005

~Fragi~ says
Aab relief fund mein kafi kuch akhata hoya hai .. but zarorat us k sahi use kee hai
Posted 14 Oct 2005

kuch jaghoon pay extra pohanch gaya hai n kuch pay bilkul bhi nahin
Posted 14 Oct 2005

~Fragi~ says
yeah exactly

we all muz participate in it
Posted 14 Oct 2005

hmmmmmmm
Posted 14 Oct 2005

Posted 14 Oct 2005

exactly
Posted 14 Oct 2005

Dua karain Allah agy raham kary
AMEEN SUM AMEEN
Posted 14 Oct 2005

ameen suma ameen
Posted 14 Oct 2005

BadShaH1 says
dua key saat saat
jeib bhi halki kerein
Posted 15 Oct 2005

ya batanay ki zarorat nahin hai kay kis nay kiya diya warna kiya faida ho ga aaisay dainay ka....sab help karain jitni ho sakti hai but keep it to urself baraha charha kay batanay ki zarorat nahin k kiya kiya diya hai
Posted 15 Oct 2005

bilkul laken sirf cheezain lay ker dayain...
Posted 15 Oct 2005

ya
Posted 15 Oct 2005

hmm
Posted 15 Oct 2005

they were agar snow shuru ho gayee..raaste band ho jayiengey kashmir main
Posted 15 Oct 2005

ya
Posted 15 Oct 2005

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