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Military Copters Deliver Aid to Kashmir | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan, AP -Pakistani and U.S. military helicopters delivered aid at a brisk pace to the earthquake-stricken region of Kashmir on Tuesday. Relief workers rushed to set up field hospitals to treat thousands of stranded, injured people who have yet to receive any care. The U.N. World Food Program said hundreds of villages have yet to receive aid.

Choppers landed under sunny skies in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan”s portion of the divided Kashmir region, bringing tents and other supplies. Heavy rains on Sunday grounded many relief flights.

Authorities warned that exposure and infections could drive the death toll up from 54,000 as the harsh Himalayan winter loomed. Landslides caused by the 7.6-magnitude earthquake on Oct. 8 cut off many roads, and they could take weeks to clear.

Maj. Farooq Nasir, an army spokesman, said smaller helicopters would take relief goods brought by big choppers to forward bases in the Neelum and Jhelum valleys on to remote mountain villages.

The United Nations said more than 80 helicopters were flying, and that the world body was planning to send up to 150,000 tents for the homeless, in addition to about 30,000 already distributed.

It said field hospitals with operating theaters were being set up, improving the survival chances for those requiring urgent surgery, but that the large numbers of patients were still &#34overwhelming.&#34

Keith Ursel, Muzaffarabad operations head for the World Food Program, said hundreds of villages had not received aid, and that thousands of lives were at stake.

&#34We need 570 tons of food every day to feed the affected people stranded in these villages,&#34 he said. &#34It is always a mixture of starvation, wounds or rough weather and fear which lead to massive deaths in such a situation.&#34

Most of the deaths were in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, while 1,360 people died in the Indian-held part of the divided region. Conflict in Indian Kashmir continued Tuesday, with suspected Islamic militants killing the state”s education minister during a raid on a high-security neighborhood that also left at least three others dead.

India has provided some aid to Pakistan, but turned down a Pakistani suggestion that it send military helicopters — without crews — to help with relief work. Pakistan, which has fought two of its three wars with India over Kashmir, said it could not have the Indian military involved directly in relief efforts.

Aftershocks continued shaking the region, though no further damage was reported. There have been more than 700 aftershocks since the quake.

Some 80,000 people were injured in the quake. The United Nations has estimated 3.3 million were left without homes and need food and shelter ahead of the approaching winter, with snow already falling in some affected areas.

Maj. Gen. Farooq Ahmed Khan, Pakistan”s top relief official, said 33,000 tents and 130,000 blankets have been distributed to quake survivors. He said 260,000 tents and 2 million blankets were needed.

Eighty Pakistani soldiers were flown by helicopter into the Neelum Valley, about 15 miles northeast of Muzaffarabad, to carry emergency rations and other relief supplies on foot to those in need, the army said.

Soldiers also drove mule teams with relief supplies to some of the region”s steep-sided villages, crossing people with bundles on their shoulders carefully walking down to lower elevations.

Patients with infected wounds and gangrene languished in remote areas, Red Cross official Sebastian Nowak said.

The U.N. International Labor Organization warned that more than 1.1 million jobs may have been lost as a result of the earthquake in Pakistan, adding that employment programs were urgently needed to lift millions of people out of poverty deepened by the disaster.

There were some signs of normalcy returning to Muzaffarabad on Tuesday, amid the devastation. Some shops reopened for business, and a military-run telecommunications company set up camps where residents can make telephone calls or send e-mails and faxes, free of charge.