Reports from Zarand

zoozanagheh

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Feb 6, 2005
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Iran Earthquake Death Toll Surpasses 400

Tue Feb 22,10:52 PM ET
[size=-1]By NASSER KARIMI, Associated Press Writer[/size]

SARBAGH, Iran - Under a cold, driving rain, survivors wailed over the bodies of the dead and dug through the ruins of mud-brick houses searching for their loved ones after a powerful earthquake flattened villages in central Iran on Tuesday, killing at least 420 people.


AP Photo


Reuters
Slideshow: Deadly Quake Strikes Iran
More Than 400 Killed in Iranian Earthquake
(AP Video)


The toll was expected to rise, because rescue teams did not have a final count from the three most isolated villages in the mountainous region. About 30,000 people were affected, many left homeless when some villages were reduced to piles of dirt and stone by the magnitude-6.4 earthquake. The number of injured was estimated at 900.



"Where have you gone? I had a lot of plans for you," Hossein Golestani sang softly as he held the lifeless form of his 7-year-old daughter, Fatima. The body of his 8-year-old daughter, Mariam, lay beside him in the devastated village of Hotkan.



Golestani and his wife were out tending their herd of goats when the quake struck at 5:55 a.m., wrecking their home.



Other survivors slapped their faces in grief as they sat next to the dead, who were wrapped in blankets in hospital morgues or on roadsides.



Some 40 villages were damaged in the quake, which struck a region 150 miles from Bam, site of a devastating earthquake in December 2003 that killed 26,000 people and leveled the historic city.



At dusk, temperatures fell and rain turned to snow in parts of the mountains, and survivors huddled around fires to keep warm, covering themselves in blankets and sipping hot soup. Some 1,500 workers from the Iranian Red Crescent fanned out in teams, bringing tents and tarps.



Heavy rain and bad visibility hampered relief efforts. But Mohammad Javad Fadaei, deputy governor of Kerman province, said the search would continue through the night in Hotkan and two other villages, Sarbagh and Douheieh, which emergency crews had had the most difficulty reaching. Rescue efforts were finished in other villages, he told The Associated Press.



The quake was centered on the outskirts of Zarand, a town of 15,000 people in Kerman province about 600 miles southeast of Tehran, Iran's geological authority said.



Though comparable in strength to the 6.6-magnitude Bam quake, Tuesday's temblor hit a more sparsely populated area and was centered far deeper — some 25 miles, compared with six miles for Bam — limiting the damage.



Still, the tiny villages that dot the central mountains — most of them made in fragile mud brick — were hit hard. In Douheieh, every building except a mosque with a golden dome had collapsed. At least 80 percent of the buildings in Sarbagh were leveled.



Fadaei said the death toll stood at 420, with some 900 injured.



Residents of Khanook village carried bodies to the morgue for washing before burial. Others crowded around lists of the dead posted on the morgue's wall, breaking into cries if they found a relative's name.



"I lost everything. All my life is gone," sobbed Asghar Owldi, 60, his face bandaged. His wife and two children were killed.



Residents dug with bare hands and shovels in the hope of a finding family members alive. Bulldozers moved in later, along with rescue teams and helicopters, but most of those uncovered were already dead.



Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards and Red Crescent teams provided the survivors with bottled water, bread and canned food.



The Iranian Red Crescent told international relief officials it did not need outside aid, said Roy Probert, a spokesman for the Geneva-based International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.



Fadaei said Iran will not issue a plea for aid, but "if foreign countries volunteer their help, we'll take tents, blankets, cash and earth-moving machinery."

Iranian relief officials said they were benefiting from their experience in the Bam quake, which prompted one of the biggest international relief efforts ever.

"The earthquake in 2003 gave us a very good experience of how to deal with such a natural disaster. Despite the rain, relief operations are going smoothly. Relief teams have reached the villages and are helping the survivors," said Mostafa Soltani, a spokesman for the Kerman government.

Iran is located on seismic fault lines and is prone to earthquakes. It experiences at least one slight earthquake every day on average.




http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&e=2&u=/ap/20050223/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_earthquake




 

zoozanagheh

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Feb 6, 2005
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Scared Iran Quake Survivors Spend Night in the Cold

Tue Feb 22, 8:26 PM ET

By Parisa Hafezi

ZARAND, Iran (Reuters) - Frightened of aftershocks and shivering from cold, thousands of Iranians spent the night in tents and temporary shelters after a powerful earthquake struck southeast Iran, killing at least 420 people.

Photo
Reuters Photo

Reuters Photo Photo
Reuters Photo
Slideshow Slideshow: Deadly Quake Strikes Iran

Video More Than 400 Killed in Iranian Earthquake
(AP Video)


Tuesday's quake, with a magnitude of 6.4, flattened several villages near the town of Zarand, 440 miles southeast of Tehran, reviving painful memories of the tremor that leveled the nearby city of Bam 14 months ago, killing 31,000 people.

In the small town of Khanouk, close to Zarand, 100 men, women and children abandoned their shattered homes to sleep rough on the floor of the town's main mosque, which was little damaged by the tremor.

"Please help us, it's winter. What are we to do?" wailed an elderly man who gave only his first name, Ali.

Elsewhere in the town, deluged by cold, driving rain, people took refuge where they could. One family of four settled down to sleep in a white pick-up truck. Another group took over a minibus.

Others huddled around camp fires or erected tents in front of the rubble of their destroyed homes.

"Our children are so scared they don't even want to go inside the tents," said taxi driver Gholamreza Asadi, 45.

Next to him sat his drained-looking wife, Sedigeh, dressed in the traditional head-to-foot black chador.

The shock of the quake forced two months pregnant Sedigeh to have a miscarriage.

"I think this must have been God's gift to us before the New Year," she said sarcastically. The Iranian New Year is celebrated on March 21.

U.S. OFFERS HELP

Despite accusations by Washington that Iran supports terrorism and is secretly building nuclear arms, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said the United States was willing to offer Iran help with the relief effort.

U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan (news - web sites) also said the United Nations (news - web sites) was ready to assist.

But Iran has so far said it does not need foreign assistance and local officials said thousands of tents and tonnes of blankets and food have been distributed.

"We have done everything to make sure that people will not spend the night in the open air in the quake-stricken areas," Kerman province Governor Ali Karimi told state television.

He acknowledged, however, that relief teams had struggled to reach at least five remote villages in the rugged, rain-soaked mountains.

Karimi put the death toll at 420 but said that would probably rise. Aid and medical workers had treated about 900 injured people, he said.

Many in Khanouk, however, complained aid had not arrived.

"There's been no help at all. I myself pulled six people out of the rubble, four of whom were dead," said Mehdi Assadi, who, like many residents, was guarding the remains of his shattered home while his family slept at the mosque.

"We have nothing to eat or drink," he said.

Geological experts said the depth of the earthquake below ground, and the fact it was centered on a sparsely populated area, prevented a repeat of the heavy death toll which occurred in Bam.

"When it happened I was so scared I couldn't move for several minutes," recalled Meysam Asadi, 15. "I remembered the Bam earthquake and thought I was going to lose everyone."

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=574&ncid=574&e=1&u=/nm/20050223/wl_nm/quake_iran_dc_26
 

zoozanagheh

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Feb 6, 2005
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[font=&quot]Apparently Lari (Interior Minster)[/font][font=&quot]’s convoy was attacked by people::[/font]


Iran Quake Survivors Complain of Slow Aid Effort


2 hours, 10 minutes ago

By Parisa Hafezi

ZARAND, Iran (Reuters) - Tired and cold survivors of a powerful earthquake in southeastern Iran begged authorities for food and shelter on Wednesday, complaining aid was slow to reach the worst-hit mountain villages.

Photo
Reuters Photo

Reuters Photo Photo
Reuters Photo
Slideshow Slideshow: Deadly Quake Strikes Iran

Video More Than 400 Killed in Iranian Earthquake
(AP Video)


Iran has so far declined offers of foreign assistance to deal with the aftermath of Tuesday's tremor which had a magnitude of 6.4 and killed at least 420 people.

Hardest hit were about a dozen villages to the north of the town of Zarand, where fragile one-storey homes collapsed into piles of mud and broken tiles.

The tremor came just 14 months after a devastating quake hit the desert citadel city of Bam, in the same province, killing 31,000 people.

Some 900 were injured in Tuesday's quake, about 440 miles southeast of Tehran, and the death toll was expected to rise.

Reuters journalists witnessed a few dozen angry villagers on a high mountain road, some brandishing sticks and stones, besiege a convoy of vehicles, one of which carried Interior Minister Abdolvahed Mousavi-Lari as he toured the affected area.

"We spent the night in the cold. Where is the aid you're talking about on television?" shouted one middle-aged man as the villagers banged on the windows and roofs of the vehicles.

"My children are freezing to death. You want to kill the survivors of the earthquake," a woman shouted hysterically, clutching a rock.

Police dispersed the crowd, some of whom had tried to block the convoy's passage by lying in front of the vehicles.

But aid workers acknowledged the relief effort was still slow and patchy.

RAIN AND FOG

"The aid which has been distributed is tents. We're trying to establish some camps here. We haven't distributed food or blankets yet," said Red Crescent medic Farhad Fathizadeh.

"We're sorry we haven't been able to help people much but we're trying to prepare ourselves for tonight," he said.

In the village of Houdkan, shrouded in fog about 30 km (20 miles) from Zarand, dozens of green and white tents dotted the hillside, many containing two or three families.

Groups clustered around bonfires trying to warm themselves under an intermittent drizzle.

Virtually no building was left standing and those that were had been deserted for fear they could come crashing down at any moment. Black banners draped on the remaining walls announced the names of the dead.

Some 20 aftershocks, with a magnitude of up to 4.6, shook the area on Tuesday, the ISNA students news agency said.

Locals said many of those killed in Houdkan, one of the two most badly damaged villages in the region, had died while at early morning prayers in the mosque.

Kerman province Governor Mohammad Ali Karimi told local radio almost all the affected villages had received tents, blankets and food. He said search and rescue operations, hampered by poor weather and difficult terrain on Tuesday, would be wound up by noon on Wednesday.

Iran's relief efforts were broadly praised on Tuesday by various U.N. agencies who said local authorities, backed by the Red Crescent, had responded quickly and effectively, employing the lessons learned from the Bam quake.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=578&ncid=578&e=2&u=/nm/20050223/ts_nm/quake_iran_dc