The
BBC has an
article about poor Nepal, hit again:
A major earthquake has struck eastern Nepal near Mount Everest, two weeks after more than 8,000 people died in a devastating quake.
At least 48 people have been killed and more than a thousand injured, officials say. At least seventeen have also died in India.
The latest earthquake hit near the town of Namche Bazaar and sent thousands of panicked residents on to the streets of Nepal's capital, Kathmandu. It had a magnitude of 7.3, compared with the 7.8 of the 25 April quake.
The latest quake struck at 12:35 Nepali time (06:50 GMT) and was centred about fifty miles) east of Kathmandu, in a rural area close to the Chinese border.
The quake was felt in northern India, Tibet, and Bangladesh. India's home ministry said Sixteen people had been killed in the state of Bihar, and one more in Uttar Pradesh. Officials in China said one person was confirmed dead in Tibet.
Rescue helicopters have been sent to districts east of Kathmandu that are believed to be the worst hit. Police in Charikot, eighty kilometers north-east of the capital, said twenty people had died there.
There are fears that many of the buildings in Kathmandu are unsafe.
The US military said a Marine Corps helicopter involved in disaster relief efforts had gone missing while working in the vicinity of Charikot. Eight people were on board.
A spokesman for Nepal's government told the BBC that nearly half of the country's 75 districts had been affected by the latest quake.
Prime Minister Sushil Koirala called for "courage and patience" and urged all those who had assisted Nepal since the 25 April quake "to once again extend your helping hand".
The BBC's Yogita Limaye, who was in Nepal's mountains when the latest earthquake struck, said: "The earth shook and it shook for a pretty long time. I can completely understand the sense of panic. We have been seeing tremors. It's been two-and-a-half weeks since the first quake. But this one really felt like it went on for a really long time. People have been terrified."
At least four people were killed in the town of Chautara, east of Kathmandu, where a number of buildings are reported to have collapsed. The International Organization for Migration said bodies were being pulled from rubble there. Krishna Gyawali, the chief district officer for Chautara, said there had been a number of landslides.
Landslides were also reported in Sindhupalchok and Dolakha. A spokeswoman told the BBC the Save The Children staff had been "dodging huge rocks rolling off the hillside".
Home Minister Bam Dev Gautam said: "Many houses have collapsed in Dolakha... there is a chance that the number of dead from the district will go up."
The BBC's Navin Singh Khadka says the new earthquake has brought down more houses and lodges in the Everest region, but that local officials report very few tourists are still in the area following the 25 April quake.
A nurse in Namche Bazaar, Rhita Doma Sherpa, told Reuters: "The school building is cracked and bits of it, I can see, they have collapsed. It was lunchtime. All the kids were outside."
The latest quake struck at a depth of nine miles, according to the US Geological Survey, the same depth as the April quake. Shallow tremors are more likely to cause greater damage at the surface.
The earthquake is likely to be one of the largest to hit Nepal, which has suffered hundreds of aftershocks since 25 April. The 7.3 quake was followed by six aftershocks of magnitude 5.0 or higher.
One tremor that hit thirty minutes later, centered on the district of Ramechhap, east of Kathmandu, had a magnitude of 6.3.
Analysis by Jonathan Amos, science correspondent for BBC News:
Scientists have already produced preliminary analyses of the recent earthquake. The epicenter was about fifty miles east-north-east of Kathmandu, halfway to Everest. On 25 April, the big quake began eighty kilometers to the north-west of the capital.
In April, we saw the fault boundary rupture eastwards for ninety miles, and the immediate assessment suggests Tuesday's tremor has occurred at the eastern edge of this failure.
In that context, this second earthquake was almost certainly triggered by the stress changes caused by the first one. Indeed, the US Geological Survey had a forecast for an aftershock in this general area. Its modeling suggested there was one-in-two hundred chance of a M7 to M7.8 event occurring this week. So, not highly probable, but certainly possible.
Quake experts often talk about "seismic gaps", which refer to segments of faults that are, to some extent, overdue a quake. Tuesday's big tremor may well have filled a hole between what we saw on 25 April and some historic events, such as those in 1934, that occurred further still to the east.
Rico says that California won't fare any better, but will be able to afford better help...
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