 |
|
An
Iranian child is seated in front of a tent in Bam (AFP)
|
TEHARAN,
December 28 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Some 1,000 people
have been pulled out so far of the ruins of the quake-devastated
southeastern Iranian city of Bam, with the U.N. expecting the search
for more survivors to end Sunday, December 28.
Those
rescued were located thanks to the sniffer dogs and hi-tech ultrasound
equipment of both Iranian and foreign emergency teams, reported Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
In
the first official indication of the progress of the rescue operation,
the state-run Iran News Agency (IRNA) announced earlier that only 200
had been rescued on Saturday, December 27.
Between
20,000 to 40,000 people had been killed in the killer 6.3-magnitude
tremor which struck
before dawn Friday, December 26, and leveled 70 per cent of the
mud-brick buildings and sites in the historical city.
Rescue
workers from 21 different countries are working alongside Iranians in
an uphill effort to find survivors.
Iran's
Interior Minister Abdolvahed Mussavi Lari said Sunday that the bodies
of 15,000 people have already been buried.
"Unfortunately
the number of dead now tops 20,000 and about 15,000 bodies have
already been buried," he said, without giving indication of the
number of injured.
Earlier
in the day, the state radio said that a total of 13,000 people have so
far been confirmed dead in the killer earthquake.
Of
these, 2,000 died of their injuries in hospitals around the region,
according to the broadcast.
End
Of Search
 |
|
Austrian
Red Cross rescue workers detect the rubble for survivors with a
sniff dog (AFP)
|
|
Meanwhile,
the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
expected the search for survivors to end Sunday, with attention
turning to the recovery of bodies and aid for the homeless.
"It
is anticipated that the search and rescue operations will be over
today," a statement from OCHA said.
At
a meeting Sunday morning in Bam between U.N. representative Jesper
Lund and Iranian officials, "there was consensus that no
international search and rescue teams are required any longer,"
the statement said.
"There
is an acceptance that we are coming out of the rescue phase and moving
now into, unfortunately, the body recovery phase and then on to the
longer phase of reconstruction," said Ted Pearn, the U.N.
coordinator on site in Bam.
He
said that while the search for survivors continued, international aid
workers were focusing on "other factors that are becoming
extremely important and that is making certain that all the injured
are cared for and then we have sufficient shelter, food and water and
particularly warm clothing because temperatures drop
considerably".
The
U.N. team arrived early Sunday to find that many residents were
sleeping outside as many of the buildings were in danger of
collapsing.
Aid
Planes Arrive
Additionally,
aid planes from all over the world landed in Kerman, southeast Iran,
to help in the aftermath of the shattering quake.
The
first U.S. plane bringing aid workers and medical material for rescue
operations, a giant Hercules C-130, arrived at 3 a.m. Sunday in
Kerman, IRNA said.
As
soon as news broke early Friday of the quake, U.S. President George W.
Bush had sent his condolences to the Iranian people and announced aid
to the victims.
Shortly
afterwards an Iranian official announced that his country would accept
aid from all countries except Israel, which Iran does not recognize.
Planeloads
of aid for the victims from the United Arab Emirates (U.A.E) and Saudi
Arabia are also due in Kerman later in on Sunday.
Riyadh
dispatched Saturday night three aircraft carrying food, medicines,
tents and blankets as well as a medical team in a continuing effort
ordered by King Fahd and Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz.
The
U.A.E, which has a dispute with Iran over three strategic Gulf islands
controlled by Tehran, was launching aid flights on Sunday under the
authority of President Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahayan.
A
U.A.E Red Crescent Society team has already flown out Sunday morning
on the first emergency flight with relief supplies.
In
Dubai, Crown Prince and U.A.E Defense Minister Sheikh Mohammad bin
Rashid al-Maktoum issued instructions to the charity bearing his name
to start aid flights to Kerman too, officials said.
The
first plane left Dubai on Sunday morning loaded with 100 tones of
goods.
Qatar
announced it would be sending aid to Iran while in Bahrain’s King
Hamad bin Issa al-Khalifa gave the green light to help the stricken
neighbor.
A
Kuwaiti medical team, led by the head of the Medical Emergency
Department and comprising a number of specialist doctors, was to leave
for Iran on Sunday, the health ministry said.
Egypt
has dispatched Sunday two chartered military planes loaded with 10.5
tones of aid, including medicines, medical equipment and tents, for
the victims of the quake.
The
Indonesian government also said Sunday it will provide assistance, in
the form of drugs and other equipment and medical personnel.
The
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) announced Sunday it
had 35 tones of medical supplies, tents, blankets and bedding loaded
in Jordan and ready to fly to southeastern Iran for the survivors.
ICRC
spokesman Roland Sidler said an Ilyushin aircraft chartered from
Iran's national flag carrier, Iran Air, would start shuttling between
the Jordanian capital, Amman, and the devastated city of Bam on
Monday, December 29.
He
added that five trucks had already made the 1,000-kilometre (625-mile)
journey to Bam from an ICRC depot in the Gulf port of Khormanshah and
that another 15 trucks were expected to follow soon.