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Harsh weather hits Pakistani quake survivors
04 Dec 2006 12:27:08 GMT
Source: Reuters

MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan, Dec 4 (Reuters) - Snow fell in northern Pakistan on Monday where hundreds of thousands of survivors of a major earthquake last year are living in makeshift shelters and a doctor said six infants had died.

A 7.6 magnitude earthquake on Oct. 8 last year killed more than 73,000 people in Pakistan and many survivors are beginning a second winter in corrugated-iron shelters.

The first severe weather of the winter began at the weekend with snow blanketing the mountains and freezing rain falling in valleys across the region.

A doctor visiting a village near the epicentre of the quake said six infants suffering from pneumonia and acute diarrhoea had died there since Saturday.

"It would be premature to call it an epidemic but obviously the ratio is alarming. It's a small village," said the doctor, Abdul Waheed, speaking by telephone from the village of Thaniyan, northwest of the region's main town, Muzaffarabad.

Waheed, who is working with the International Organisation of Migration aid agency, said the heavy rain appeared to have led to contamination of water in the village.

That, plus the cold, had led to the deaths of the children, he said.

A Reuters photographer heading up into the mountains on Monday said he saw many people coming down, some carrying children, bound for Muzaffarabad.

The Pakistani military, the United Nations and the Red Cross mounted a major relief effort after the quake last year that prevented a second wave of death over the winter.

But last winter was unusually mild.

The weather is expected to be more harsh this winter but aid agencies say they are ready to help the survivors.

"We are pretty much ready for the winter. We have pre-positioned our food supplies," said Amjad Jamal, a spokesman for the U.N. World Food Programme.

"Of course, there are always problems during the winter ... Logistically it is a problem. We can't use our trucks and so have to rely on more costly helicopters, he said.

The bad weather was due to last another two or three days, the meteorological department said.
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Kashmiri survivors of the October 2005 earthquake watch an event organised by the Indian Air Force (IAF) in Urusa, 115 km (71 miles) west of Srinagar, December 28, 2006. The IAF on Thursday organised a media event in Urusa, a region which was completely destroyed by the October 8, 2005 earthquake. During the event the Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal S. P. Tyagi inaugurated a school and handed over a mini power project and a food storage center to Kashmir government authorities.