Hundreds Dead After Devastating Nepal Earthquake Topples Structures, Starts Avalanches
A little over four years after the devastating Japanese earthquake led to a tsunami that triggered the biggest nuclear disaster since Chernobyl, overnight Asia was once again the epicenter of a massive, 7.9 magnitude earthquake, this time not on the Pacific Rim but deep in the Himalayan mountain range, striking the small country of Nepal and sending tremors deep in Northern India, resulting in at least 449 deaths, countless injured, toppling a 19th-century tower in the capital Kathmandu and triggering avalanches on Mount Everest.
The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake, initially measured at 7.7 but upgraded to 7.9 magnitude, struck 80 km (50 miles) east of Pokhara. It was only 2 km deep.
According to Reuters, this was the worst quake to hit the impoverished Himalayan nation in 81 years. The tremor was so strong it caused damage in neighboring Indian states and Bangladesh. The quake was shallow, intensifying the amount of energy released over a relatively small area.
Reuters further reports that the death toll had reached 449 in Nepal according to an initial police estimate, most from the Kathmandu Valley. There was little information coming from the outlying areas of the mountainous country and helicopters were circling overheard to get a better sense of the damage.
"Hundreds of people are feared dead and there are reports of widespread damage to property. The devastation is not confined to some areas of Nepal. Almost the entire country has been hit," said Krishna Prasad Dhakal, deputy chief of mission at Nepal’s Embassy in New Delhi.
The following photos from the scene of the incident confirm the extent of the devastation.
Streets in #Nepal ’s capital Kathmandu severely damaged by strong M8.1 #earthquake : CENC http://bit.ly/1Joy3tY
— CCTVNEWS (@cctvnews) April 25, 2015
Second quake at M7.0 jolts ground 30km beneath #Nepal at 6:45 UTC, 34 minutes after the first: CENC http://bit.ly/1Joy29k
— CCTVNEWS (@cctvnews) April 25, 2015
Hundreds feared trapped in Kathmandu’s crumbled #Dharara Tower: local media http://bit.ly/1Joy3tZ
— CCTVNEWS (@cctvnews) April 25, 2015
NOW--- LOCALS TRAPPED inside this rubble- people trying hard to rescue http://bit.ly/1b0H51k
— Kashish Das Shrestha (@kashishds) April 25, 2015
Latest pics sent to ANI from Kathmandu of #earthquake aftermath http://bit.ly/1Joy29o
— ANI (@ANI_news) April 25, 2015
#Earthquake #Nepal - We have reports from #Kathmandu about collapsed buildings and fatalities- http://bit.ly/1Joy3u4 http://bit.ly/1Joy3u7
— Earthquake Report (@ShakingEarth) April 25, 2015
Kathmandu temples destroyed by earthquake. http://bit.ly/1b0H39C
— Siobhan Heanue (@siobhanheanue) April 25, 2015
Buildings collapse, at least two killed as 7.9 quake hits Nepal, India http://bit.ly/1b0H39E via @Reuters
— Anantha (@AnanthalakshmiA) April 25, 2015
"Still shaking as I'm typing this.” http://bit.ly/1b0H39K http://bit.ly/1b0H39M
— Oliver Darcy (@oliverdarcy) April 25, 2015
7 story building collapsed in Sat-tale Kapan. #kathmandu #Nepal http://bit.ly/1b0H3q2
— Aakar Anil (@aakarpost) April 25, 2015
Here is the first video from the capital Kathmandu:
As the oingoing reports from the scene of the quake trickle in, it is almost certain that the final death toll will be far greater, although it will hopefully not surpass the devastating 1934 M8.3 quake that struck Nepal and killed over 8,500.
"Hundreds of people are feared dead and there are reports of widespread damage to property. The devastation is not confined to some areas of Nepal. Almost the entire country has been hit," said Krishna Prasad Dhakal, deputy chief of mission at Nepal’s Embassy in New Delhi.
"We are totally cut off from most parts of our country," said Ram Narayan Pandey of the Nepal Disaster Management Authority, who was coordinating relief efforts from Kathmandu.
The death toll in northern India rose to at least 12, with six killed in house collapses in Uttar Pradesh and six more dying in Bihar further east, according to government officials.
Striking in immediate proximity to Mount Everest, the earthquake led to at least one major avalanche in its aftermath. It was unknown as of this moment if any climbers were caught in its wake.
The quake triggered an avalanche on Mount Everest, according to climbers there, raising fears for those on the world's highest peak a year after a massive snowslide caused the deadliest incident on the world's highest mountain.
Romanian climber Alex Gavan said on Twitter that there had been a "huge avalanche" and "many, many" people were up on the mountain. "Running for life from my tent," Gavan said. "Everest base camp huge earthquake then huge avalanche."
Another climber, Daniel Mazur, said Everest base camp had been "severely damaged" and his team was trapped. Please pray for everyone," he said on his Twitter page.
An avalanche in April 2014 just above the base camp on Mount Everest killed 16 Nepali guides. April is one of the most popular times to climb Everest before rain and clouds cloak the mountain at the end of next month.
Avalanche on Everest after earthquake. 50-60 people trapped at Dharahara.
— Damcho Dorji (@DamchoDorji) April 25, 2015
Everest base camp huge earthquaqe then huge avalanche from pumori.Running for life from my tent. Unhurt. Many many people up the mountain.
— Alex Gavan (@AlexGAVAN) April 25, 2015
The quake was so powerful, tremors were felt as far away as New Delhi and other northern cities in India, with reports that they had lasted up to a minute. "Massive tremors have been felt here in Delhi and several other parts of India," said a newsreader on NDTV in Delhi.
"You can see pictures of our Delhi studios, where the windows rattled and everything shook for a very long time, for a minute perhaps or longer," she said as footage showed studio ceiling camera lights shaking.
"We are in the process of finding more information and are working to reach out to those affected, both at home and in Nepal," tweeted Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
He convened a high-level meeting with ministers and top officials to assess the situation. There were no preliminary reports of damage anywhere in India, Home Minister Rajnath Singh told the Press Trust of India.
The massive quake concludes a period of relative seismic stability in the Asian region over the past 4 years. One hopes that this isn't a harbinger of many more earthquakes to come, and certainly none targeting already suffering Japan, because the last things its foundering economy, already on the Keynesian precipice, needs is an act of nature to seal its fate.
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