Several hours after giving coverage to this on Morning Report Radio NZ has posted something on its website
on the devastating landslide in the Langtang Valley in Nepal on the border with Tibet, which describes an entire village being destroyed. No doubt this has been replicated many times.
Of this there is not a sign on Radio NZ's website and I cannot find anything on this from the BBC, so I am providing what I can find.
There has been a lot from international media about Kathmandy and its environs but there has been very little of the fate of these isolated parts of Nepal.
These people who already had very little now have nothing. It is essential that they receive help and I will be coming back with more on this very soon.
Deadly Landslide Triggered by 7.8 Earthquake in Nepal Spotted By Satellite
on the devastating landslide in the Langtang Valley in Nepal on the border with Tibet, which describes an entire village being destroyed. No doubt this has been replicated many times.
Of this there is not a sign on Radio NZ's website and I cannot find anything on this from the BBC, so I am providing what I can find.
There has been a lot from international media about Kathmandy and its environs but there has been very little of the fate of these isolated parts of Nepal.
These people who already had very little now have nothing. It is essential that they receive help and I will be coming back with more on this very soon.
Nepal earthquake 'Worst affected' village of Langtang
BBC
Emergency
workers in Nepal continue to face challenges after the devastating
earthquake.
Their
priority is to reach the country's remote, mountainous villages,
feared to have been wiped off the map.
Nepalese village 'wiped out'
5
May, 2015
The
Nepalese earthquake may have killed more than 300 people in a single
village in a popular trekking area.
Nepalis
and foreign trekkers were killed in the village of Langtang following
the devastating earthquake nine days ago.
A
file image of Langtan village, home to 435 people. - Photo: AFP
/ FILE
The
first reporter to reach Langtang in northern Nepal said the village
had been razed and bodies were laid out everywhere.
Justin
Rowlatt said villagers told him the sky went dark before an avalanche
came down.
"You
can see the power of the damage that was done, all the trees were
knocked down like so many matchsticks."
He
said the avalanche collapsed on top of the village and barely any
remains of it could be seen.
He
said 178 villagers and 150 foreigners may have died in the avalanche.
One
survivor, Dindu Lama, told him he had lost family members.
"We
have lost everything .... now we have nothing," he said.
Langtan
village was one of the most popular trekking destinations in Nepal
and home to 435 people.
Fifty-five
hotels and guesthouses and the villagers' homes are now buried under
a mass of ice and rock.
The
7.8 magnitude earthquake is now known to have killed more than 7,000
people and injured more than 10,000.
Deadly Landslide Triggered by 7.8 Earthquake in Nepal Spotted By Satellite
3
May, 2015
A
newly obtained satellite image shows a deadly landslide triggered by
the massive 7.8 earthquake that struck Nepal on April 25.
Using
Landsat satellite imagery from the United States Geological Survey
(USGS), NASA released the comparison below which shows the
landslide on April 30 near the village of Langtang. The other image
in the animation shows the exact same area about a month prior to the
earthquake on March 29.
(NASA/USGS)
The
Associated Press said on Sunday morning that the remains of 55 people
were found this weekend in the Langtang Valley where the landslide
occurred. These are the latest deaths to be included in the overall
death toll that is now over 7,200
100
bodies discovered in remote Langtang region of Nepalese Himalayas as
death toll from 25 April disaster reaches 7,365
4
May, 2015
Police,
soldiers and volunteers have launched a major search operation in the
remote Langtang region of the Nepalese Himalayas to look for up to
600 trekkers and support staff who have been missing since an
7.8-magnitude earthquake hit the south Asian country nine days ago.
The
death toll in the disaster has reached 7,365, with 14,355 injured.
The bodies of about 100 trekkers and villagers were recovered at the
biggest village in Langtang, which lies 60km (40 miles) north of
Kathmandu and is on a trekking route popular with westerners.
The
entire village, which includes 55 guesthouses used by trekkers, was
wiped out by the avalanche, officials said. “Volunteers and police
personnel are digging through six-foot snow with shovels looking for
more bodies,” Gautam Rimal, assistant chief district officer, said.
Uddab
Bhattarai, the most senior administrator in the area, said more than
400 people had been killed in Langtang, with at least 250 missing.
“We have been doing search and rescue massively but haven’t been
able to figure out the exact number of missing,” he said.
The
president of Trekking Agencies’ Association of Nepal, Ramesh
Dhamala, said the number of people missing could at least twice as
high. “According to the records, 1,350 Nepalese and foreign
trekkers entered Langtang, but once the earthquake struck we were
unable to find out how many were still there,” he said. “We
assume at least 600 foreigners and Nepalese might be missing in the
area.”
Langtang,
a region of steep gorges and high mountains on the border with Tibet,
was hit by massive landslides after the quake. “It seems that
entire hillsides sheared away. There were huge avalanches too, a mix
of snow and mud,” said a Kathmandu-based trekking operator with
long experience of the region.
Tulsi
Prasad Gautam, head of the tourism department in Nepal, described the
Langtang valley as “completely wiped away”.
In
other parts of the Himalayan country, three people were pulled alive
from the rubble of their home on Sunday, eight days after the
earthquake, while local media reported that a 101-year-old man was
found alive on Saturday.
There
was continuing confusion over the climbing season on Everest, the
world’s highest peak, with conflicting announcements by government
officials. Whatever the eventual administrative decision it appears
the spring season, which is the most popular with mountaineers, is
unlikely to see any attempts on the 29,000ft mountain.
The
route that is laid anew each year through the icefall, one of the
most dangerous passages though low down the peak, has been largely
destroyed and local Sherpa guides who specialise in preparing a path
through the jumble of ice blocks and crevasses are reported to have
refused to repair it.
The
relief operation has been troubled by bureaucratic bottlenecks,
logistic difficulties and rough terrain. Aftershocks are also
continuing, though bad weather that had grounded helicopters has
cleared.
Nine
days after the earthquake, Sushil Koirala, the prime minister of
Nepal, has made his first visit outside the capital. The 75-year-old
politician travelled to Chautara in Sindhupalchowk district, where at
least 3,000 people were killed. “We are doing our best in whatever
resources we have,” he said, adding that his home had been damaged.
Western
aid officials have expressed frustration at infighting within the
Nepalese government, which they say is hampering the relief
operation.
The
chief district officer of Gorkha, Uddhav Timilsina, said 20,000
tarpaulins had been distributed, though more than twice as many were
needed. “Landslides in some places have affected our relief
distribution and we haven’t been able to reach some of the affected
area because of the road conditions,” he said. “We do have
scarcity of food.”
A
police spokesman, Kamal Singh Bam, said a shortage of tarpaulins was
a serious problem.
US
military aircraft and personnel arrived in Nepal on Sunday and were
due to begin helping ferry relief supplies to stricken areas outside
the capital. The US contingent comprised eight aircraft, including
one Huey and two C-130s, and 100-120 personnel, spokeswoman Capt
Cassandra Gesecki said.
On
Sunday, the government restricted the landing of large cargo aircraft
at the congested airport to limit damage to the stressed runway. The
UN has said 8 million of Nepal’s 28 million people had been
affected by the quake, with at least 2 million needing tents, water,
food and medicines over the next three months. A survey found that
three-quarters of the buildings in Kathmandu had been destroyed or
were unsafe.
Thousands
of people remain camped out in the city and its surroundings. Many
more remote villages are still to be reached, and aid officials fear
further fatalities from infected wounds sustained in the quake and
among vulnerable sections of the population such as the elderly and
the very young.
Here is all the video footage I can find
And to see how this amazing part of the world looked before the earthquake
Resilience
The
resilience of mountain dwellers of Nepal is extraordinary.
After
losing his house to the quake Mr. Dev Narayan Sapkota salvaged what
he could and made this new shelter in two days. Hats Off to him for
not waiting for any outside support.
Location
Gothpani VDC. Kavre.
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