<p>Nepal government today asked hundreds of foreign rescue workers to leave the quake-hit country as immediate relief has already been provided and the remaining tasks will be carried out by its army and police.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The major rescue work in Kathmandu and surrounding areas is over and the remaining operations can be handled by local workers, Information Minister Minendra Rijal said.<br /><br />However, there was work remaining in the villages and remote mountainous areas that could be carried out by foreign aid volunteers along with local police and army, he said.<br /><br />The Central Natural Disaster Relief Committee - headed by Home Minister Bam Dev Gautam, who is also the Deputy Prime Minister - had asked the government to bid adieu to the foreign rescue teams yesterday, eight days after the deadly earthquake hit the Himalayan nation.<br /><br />Around 4,500 people from around 34 nations, including National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) teams from India, came to Nepal after the April 25 earthquake to carry out the rescue work and pull people out of the debris.<br /><br />Most of the rescue teams were carrying out operations in the worst affected districts of the Kathmandu Valley, Sindhupalchowk and Gorkha districts.<br /><br />"Its more than eight days after the earthquake. The rescue teams have served their purpose and we are very thankful to them.<br /><br />"The Central Natural Disaster Relief Committee has recommended the government to thank these teams for the work they have done for Nepal so that they can exit the country. It is up to the government to take a call now," home ministry official Laxmi Prasad Dhakal said.<br /><br />"According to the guidelines of International Search and Rescue Group (INSRAG) guidelines, the search and rescue teams have to be carried out for 7 days, when the survival chances are highest. The remaining search and rescue work will now be carried out by the Nepalese army and police," he added.<br /><br />However, all the relief and medical teams are still in Nepal carrying out their operations.<br />The medical teams are expected to be in the country for some more time.<br /><br />"The Health ministry will allow only a few teams of health workers to work in the country on the basis of their expertise. Others will be asked to return home.<br /><br />"Relief teams are working in different teams, but topography and terrain of the nation is still acting as a major impediment in reaching out to the people. But foreign rescue team, the Indian and the American air forces are helping in reaching out to them," Dhakal added.<br /><br />More than 7,200 people, including 54 foreigners have lost their lives in the 7.9-magnitude earthquake. <br /><br />Nepal police said the number of Indians killed in the quake has reached 41, who are among 57 foreigners killed.<br /><br />At least 10 Indians were also among the injured.<br /><br />India's youngest Everest summitteer Arjun Vajpai was also rescued from Makalu base camp and flown to Kathmandu. Vajpai has been rescued by Nepal Army team from the mountain area.<br /><br />Prime Minister Sushil Koirala, who inspected Chautara area in one of the worst-hit districts Sindhupalchowk today, directed officials to leave "no stone unturned" in efforts to save and rehabilitate the victims.<br /><br />"Our country is technically not well-equipped in disaster management, even then, I request every official to leave no stone unturned as per our capacity," said Koirala.<br />Officials said nearly 100 bodies of trekkers and villagers were found buried in an avalanche set off by the quake.<br /><br />Nepal experienced some seven small aftershocks today, including one measuring 4.6 on the Richter Scale with its epicentre in Sindhupalchowk, according to the National Seismological Centre (NSC).<br /><br />Six other quakes below 5 on the Richter scale were recorded with their epicentre in Dolakha, Gorkha and Nuwakot districts, keeping people on edge, most of whom have been staying in the open battling bad weather and scarce food and water supplies.<br /><br />However, there were no injuries or destruction reported from the quakes.<br /><br />According to an official at NSC Nepal had suffered more than 138 aftershocks of more than 4 on the Richter scale since the powerful April 25 earthquake killed thousands.<br />Officials predict that the aftershocks may continue for more than a month. <br /><br />Responding to a query, Koirala said that no Nepalis were left behind from the access of relief materials.<br /><br />"The home where I live has also fully cracked, you can come and check. There is nothing than to accept tragedies caused by the earthquake," he said.<br /><br />The Cabinet endorsed yesterday's recommendation by the Central Natural Disaster Relief Committee to ask the foreign rescue workers to leave the country.<br /><br />"Its more than eight days after the earthquake. The rescue teams have served their purpose and we are very thankful to them.<br /><br />"The relief committee has recommended the government to thank these teams for the work they have done for Nepal so that they can exit the country. It is up to the government to take a call now," home ministry official Laxmi Prasad Dhakal had said.<br /><br />"According to the guidelines of International Search and Rescue Group (INSRAG) guidelines, the search and rescue teams have to be carried out for 7 days, when the survival chances are highest. The remaining search and rescue work will now be carried out by the Nepalese army and police," he added.<br /><br />The highest number of the dead has been recorded in the Sindhupalchowk which currently has soared to 2,838 while in Kathmandu, death toll has steadily rose to 1,202.<br />As many as 1,91,058 houses and 10,744 government buildings have been damaged completely by the powerful temblor, more than twice the number of households wrecked in the 1934's deadly temblor that has been the country's worst disaster of all times.<br />"A disaster of such magnitude would test the capacities of any government in the world," said EU's Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management Christos Stylianides. <br />Finance Minister Ram Sharan Mahat has said the death toll in the country's worst disaster in over 80 years is expected to climb "much higher". Koirala himself had earlier said the toll might touch a 15,000-mark.<br /><br />An Indian Air Force team rescued 22 Buddhist monks from a remote village of Gorkha district, the epicenter of the devastating quake. The monks were rescued by Indian Army helicopters from Hinang Gompa, according to Indian Embassy sources here.<br /><br />Nepal parties have agreed that all those interested in carrying out relief work in the country can start at once, without having to route the process through the government.<br /><br />A report released by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said the number of houses destroyed in the country is over 1,60,000, nearly twice the number of households wrecked in the 1934's deadly temblor that has been the country's worst disaster of all times.<br /><br />The UN urged Nepal to relax customs controls which it says are holding up deliveries of aid coming from countries around the world from reaching the survivors.<br /><br />Nepal lifted import taxes on tarpaulins and tents on Friday but Dhakal said all goods arriving from abroad had to be inspected.<br /><br />Aid agencies have warned that remote mountainous areas in the country have suffered "almost total devastation". <br /></p>
<p>Nepal government today asked hundreds of foreign rescue workers to leave the quake-hit country as immediate relief has already been provided and the remaining tasks will be carried out by its army and police.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The major rescue work in Kathmandu and surrounding areas is over and the remaining operations can be handled by local workers, Information Minister Minendra Rijal said.<br /><br />However, there was work remaining in the villages and remote mountainous areas that could be carried out by foreign aid volunteers along with local police and army, he said.<br /><br />The Central Natural Disaster Relief Committee - headed by Home Minister Bam Dev Gautam, who is also the Deputy Prime Minister - had asked the government to bid adieu to the foreign rescue teams yesterday, eight days after the deadly earthquake hit the Himalayan nation.<br /><br />Around 4,500 people from around 34 nations, including National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) teams from India, came to Nepal after the April 25 earthquake to carry out the rescue work and pull people out of the debris.<br /><br />Most of the rescue teams were carrying out operations in the worst affected districts of the Kathmandu Valley, Sindhupalchowk and Gorkha districts.<br /><br />"Its more than eight days after the earthquake. The rescue teams have served their purpose and we are very thankful to them.<br /><br />"The Central Natural Disaster Relief Committee has recommended the government to thank these teams for the work they have done for Nepal so that they can exit the country. It is up to the government to take a call now," home ministry official Laxmi Prasad Dhakal said.<br /><br />"According to the guidelines of International Search and Rescue Group (INSRAG) guidelines, the search and rescue teams have to be carried out for 7 days, when the survival chances are highest. The remaining search and rescue work will now be carried out by the Nepalese army and police," he added.<br /><br />However, all the relief and medical teams are still in Nepal carrying out their operations.<br />The medical teams are expected to be in the country for some more time.<br /><br />"The Health ministry will allow only a few teams of health workers to work in the country on the basis of their expertise. Others will be asked to return home.<br /><br />"Relief teams are working in different teams, but topography and terrain of the nation is still acting as a major impediment in reaching out to the people. But foreign rescue team, the Indian and the American air forces are helping in reaching out to them," Dhakal added.<br /><br />More than 7,200 people, including 54 foreigners have lost their lives in the 7.9-magnitude earthquake. <br /><br />Nepal police said the number of Indians killed in the quake has reached 41, who are among 57 foreigners killed.<br /><br />At least 10 Indians were also among the injured.<br /><br />India's youngest Everest summitteer Arjun Vajpai was also rescued from Makalu base camp and flown to Kathmandu. Vajpai has been rescued by Nepal Army team from the mountain area.<br /><br />Prime Minister Sushil Koirala, who inspected Chautara area in one of the worst-hit districts Sindhupalchowk today, directed officials to leave "no stone unturned" in efforts to save and rehabilitate the victims.<br /><br />"Our country is technically not well-equipped in disaster management, even then, I request every official to leave no stone unturned as per our capacity," said Koirala.<br />Officials said nearly 100 bodies of trekkers and villagers were found buried in an avalanche set off by the quake.<br /><br />Nepal experienced some seven small aftershocks today, including one measuring 4.6 on the Richter Scale with its epicentre in Sindhupalchowk, according to the National Seismological Centre (NSC).<br /><br />Six other quakes below 5 on the Richter scale were recorded with their epicentre in Dolakha, Gorkha and Nuwakot districts, keeping people on edge, most of whom have been staying in the open battling bad weather and scarce food and water supplies.<br /><br />However, there were no injuries or destruction reported from the quakes.<br /><br />According to an official at NSC Nepal had suffered more than 138 aftershocks of more than 4 on the Richter scale since the powerful April 25 earthquake killed thousands.<br />Officials predict that the aftershocks may continue for more than a month. <br /><br />Responding to a query, Koirala said that no Nepalis were left behind from the access of relief materials.<br /><br />"The home where I live has also fully cracked, you can come and check. There is nothing than to accept tragedies caused by the earthquake," he said.<br /><br />The Cabinet endorsed yesterday's recommendation by the Central Natural Disaster Relief Committee to ask the foreign rescue workers to leave the country.<br /><br />"Its more than eight days after the earthquake. The rescue teams have served their purpose and we are very thankful to them.<br /><br />"The relief committee has recommended the government to thank these teams for the work they have done for Nepal so that they can exit the country. It is up to the government to take a call now," home ministry official Laxmi Prasad Dhakal had said.<br /><br />"According to the guidelines of International Search and Rescue Group (INSRAG) guidelines, the search and rescue teams have to be carried out for 7 days, when the survival chances are highest. The remaining search and rescue work will now be carried out by the Nepalese army and police," he added.<br /><br />The highest number of the dead has been recorded in the Sindhupalchowk which currently has soared to 2,838 while in Kathmandu, death toll has steadily rose to 1,202.<br />As many as 1,91,058 houses and 10,744 government buildings have been damaged completely by the powerful temblor, more than twice the number of households wrecked in the 1934's deadly temblor that has been the country's worst disaster of all times.<br />"A disaster of such magnitude would test the capacities of any government in the world," said EU's Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management Christos Stylianides. <br />Finance Minister Ram Sharan Mahat has said the death toll in the country's worst disaster in over 80 years is expected to climb "much higher". Koirala himself had earlier said the toll might touch a 15,000-mark.<br /><br />An Indian Air Force team rescued 22 Buddhist monks from a remote village of Gorkha district, the epicenter of the devastating quake. The monks were rescued by Indian Army helicopters from Hinang Gompa, according to Indian Embassy sources here.<br /><br />Nepal parties have agreed that all those interested in carrying out relief work in the country can start at once, without having to route the process through the government.<br /><br />A report released by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said the number of houses destroyed in the country is over 1,60,000, nearly twice the number of households wrecked in the 1934's deadly temblor that has been the country's worst disaster of all times.<br /><br />The UN urged Nepal to relax customs controls which it says are holding up deliveries of aid coming from countries around the world from reaching the survivors.<br /><br />Nepal lifted import taxes on tarpaulins and tents on Friday but Dhakal said all goods arriving from abroad had to be inspected.<br /><br />Aid agencies have warned that remote mountainous areas in the country have suffered "almost total devastation". <br /></p>