Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
International

DART Digs Out After Second Nepal Quake, Opening Roads And Treating Victims

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2015 10:39 AM
    OTTAWA — Canadian Forces personnel have cleared key roads of debris in Nepal following a second earthquake that hit the country on Tuesday.
     
    Lt.-Col. Ed Izatt, the commander of Canada's Disaster Assistance Response Team, says that's allowing the flow of aid agencies and essential goods to affected areas.
     
    Izatt says the DART has also treated 550 patients in the last eight days at its medical clinic, which it has set up at Camp Sumitra, about 70 kilometres northeast of Kathmandu.
     
    Canada has about 200 DART personnel in Nepal, who were deployed after late April's devastating earthquake, which has claimed more than 8,000 lives.
     
    The second quake left dozens dead and more than 1,000 injured, striking midway between Kathmandu and Mount Everest, and was felt all over the Nepalese capital and surrounding region.
     
    Speaking via teleconference from Nepal, Izatt says Canadian personnel are co-operating with a Chinese team to clear the Friendship Highway, a key land artery that connects Kathmandu to northern regions.
     
    Izatt says Canadian personnel are venturing out into local villages to better assess the needs of people there.
     
    They also delivered emergency hand cranked radios to two villages so they can receive information on relief efforts, and taught the villagers how to use them, says Izatt.
     
    Izatt says the priority of the DART is to provide emergency relief to the victims of the second earthquake.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Brief Jail Term For Lakhvi After India's Protest

    Brief Jail Term For Lakhvi After India's Protest
    A day after the detention orders of Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, an alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai terror attack, were declared void by the Islamabad High Court (IHC), the home ministry of Pakistan's Punjab province reordered his detention on Saturday.

    Brief Jail Term For Lakhvi After India's Protest

    Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi's Release; Outraged India Summons Envoy

    Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi's Release; Outraged India Summons Envoy
    A Pakistani court on Friday declared the detention orders of Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, the alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attack, as illegal and ordered his immediate release, triggering strong reaction from India which summoned the Pakistan envoy in New Delhi to convey its outrage.

    Pakistan Court Orders Lakhvi's Release; Outraged India Summons Envoy

    Tamils In Canada Urge Modi To Pressure Sri Lanka

    Tamils In Canada Urge Modi To Pressure Sri Lanka
    Welcoming Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Colombo, a leading Tamil group in Canada - home to the largest Tamil diaspora outside Sri Lanka - has urged him to put pressure on new President Maithiripala Sirisena to resolve the dragging ethnic issue.

    Tamils In Canada Urge Modi To Pressure Sri Lanka

    Satnam Singh, Racially Asbused Indian Man In New Zealand, To Get Damages

    Satnam Singh, Racially Asbused Indian Man In New Zealand, To Get Damages
    An Indian-origin liquor store owner and manager in New Zealand have been ordered to pay an Indian employee NZD45,000 ($32,881) in damages over racial harassment, media reported on Tuesday.

    Satnam Singh, Racially Asbused Indian Man In New Zealand, To Get Damages

    Apple Watch unveiled: lots of features, functions, price tags. So... Do you want it?

    Apple Watch unveiled: lots of features, functions, price tags. So... Do you want it?
    SAN FRANCISCO — Make calls, read email, control music, manage Instagram photos, keep up with your workout, pay for groceries, open your hotel room door. CEO Tim Cook says you can do it all from your wrist with Apple Watch — for 18 hours a day. That's how long the battery will last on an average day.

    Apple Watch unveiled: lots of features, functions, price tags. So... Do you want it?

    Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death

    Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death
    OTTAWA — A senior Canadian government official says he adamantly rejects a Kurdish account of a friendly-fire incident in Iraq that saw peshmerga fighters kill one Canadian soldier and wound three others. Sgt. Andrew Joseph Doiron was gunned down in the night-time darkness Friday when his special forces unit was surprised by a hail of gunfire from a group of their Kurdish peshmerga allies.

    Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death