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SHAKE AND BLOW
Hundreds gather in Nepal capital to mark one month since quake
by Staff Writers
Kathmandu (AFP) May 25, 2015


Thousands head home as Nepal landslide flood fears ease
Kathmandu (AFP) May 25, 2015 - Thousands of villagers have returned to their homes in quake-hit Nepal's mountainous northwest after a river which was dammed by a landslide began flowing normally again, a local official said Monday.

The landslide late Saturday night had sent mud and rocks tumbling into the Kali Gandaki river in Myagdi district, creating a two-kilometre-long (1.2 mile) artificial lake and sparking fears of flash flooding.

But officials said the debris had now been washed away by the force of the current and the river was flowing freely once more.

"Over 15,000 people had left their homes fearing that the water would sweep them up," said district chief, Tek Bahadur KC.

"Now that the danger is over, they have started coming back to their homes," he told AFP.

The region has witnessed several small landslides in recent days, following a massive quake that struck Nepal on April 25, according to local officials.

No one was hurt in the landslide but water submerged 26 houses along the river, which begins near the Nepal-China border and flows into northern India, eventually joining the Ganges.

The snow-fed waters are also the site of Nepal's largest hydroelectric project that generates 144 megawatts of power, located south of the landslide-blocked area.

Officials temporarily shut down the plant after the landslide but plan to resume operations later on Monday.

"Now that the river is flowing normally, we expect to start power generation by this evening," said Tulasi Sapkota, the project's administrative chief.

Twin quakes have devastated Nepal in recent weeks, killing more than 8,600 people and leaving thousands in desperate need of food, clean water and shelter.

Hundreds of Nepalis gathered Monday at the rubble of a 19th-century tower in Kathmandu to mark one month since a devastating earthquake killed more than 8,600 people in the Himalayan nation.

The quake, which was followed by a second major tremor on May 12, brought down buildings across the country including historic temples, monuments and the much-loved Dharahara tower as tourists and locals climbed its more than 200 steps.

After the national anthem was played on loudspeakers, crowds surrounded the collapsed tower and observed 56 seconds of silence at 11:56, the moment the 7.8-magnitude quake ripped through Nepal on April 25.

Nina Shrestha, a 23-year-old student carrying a small Nepali flag, said the nine-storey tower was "always the first thing" she looked for when flying into Kathmandu.

"Its collapse signifies the devastation our country has suffered," she told AFP.

The 50.5-metre (165-foot) high attraction -- which contained a spiral staircase and offered visitors panoramic views of the capital -- was reduced to just its base when the quake struck.

Ram Chandra Shrestha, who spent 12 years tending the garden in the tower complex, told AFP that "it is hard to look up and not see the tower, it sends a chill through my heart".

Those attending the ceremony, organised by political party Bibeksheel Nepali, told of their despair not only of losing their homes but also their jobs, leaving them facing a bleak future.

Like thousands of others, 41-year-old Dil Maya Rai has been living in a tent since the massive quake.

"We can't find a room to rent and the carpet factory where I worked also collapsed in the quake," Rai told AFP.

"I don't know how we will get by," he said.

The twin quakes destroyed nearly half a million houses and left thousands in desperate need of food, clean water and shelter, with experts warning that the opportunity to help victims is closing fast before monsoon rains arrive next month.

The World Food Programme announced plans to open up land and air routes to get more aid to far-flung mountain villages demolished by the quake, although no details were given.

"To open up some of the overland routes is gonna be incredibly difficult, it's gonna be incredibly dangerous and it's gonna be incredibly expensive," WFP's emergency coordinator Richard Ragan told reporters.

The United Nations has repeatedly called on international donors to ramp up their aid contributions, with only a fifth of its $423 million appeal trickling in so far.

Ragan also denied allegations in the Nepali press that villagers found the rice distributed by the organisation to be inedible.

"We did tests... and found that there was a high percentage of broken rice and we immediately began to replace it.

"The issue was not that it was inedible," he said.

Elsewhere on Monday, officials said thousands of villagers have returned to their homes in the mountainous northwest after a river which was dammed by a landslide began flowing normally again.

The landslide late Saturday night had sent mud and rocks tumbling into the Kali Gandaki river in Myagdi district, creating a large artificial lake and sparking fears of flash flooding.

pm-amu/tha/sm

April


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