Quake
survivors eating grass to stay alive
FAIZABAD (AFP) 16-7-1998 - Relief helicopters took to the skies
over quake-hit northeast Afghanistan Saturday to drop vital supplies of
food, amid reports desperate survivors are eating grass to stay alive.
One week after the massive temblor devastated scores of
villages in the foothills of the Hindu Kush mountain range, the relief
effort has been severely hampered by bad weather and a shortage of helicopters.
Torrential rain has caused mudslides that have wreaked
further havoc in the shattered regions of Chah-ab, Shahr-e-Bozurg and Rostak
-- where many villagers have been without food or drinking water since
the quake struck.
"We lost a whole day to bad weather and now there
is very real concern for survivors," UN spokesman Rupet Colville told
AFP.
"The rain has increased the urgent need to get food
and shelter to these villages where conditions must be appalling. We have
to also consider the mudslides may have caused more victims," he said.
"The only food people have is grass, that is all
people are eating. Children are dying because there is nothing to eat and
it is getting worse and worse every day," said one man form Chow Ghani
village.
"The spring and all the drinking water has been covered
by landslides. I can't describe it," said the villager, who walked
out of Chow Ghani four days ago.
Some 100 villages have been hit by the quake, including
28 that were completely destroyed, and the death toll is expected to top
5000.
However only handful of villagers can be reached by road
and the bad weather grounded the three Red Cross and UN helicopters for
24 vital hours.
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