Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Firefighters Return From Grim Devastation Of Nepal Earthquake

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 May, 2015 09:45 PM
  • B.C. Firefighters Return From Grim Devastation Of Nepal Earthquake
RICHMOND, B.C. — On their third day in earthquake-stricken Nepal, a bus of volunteer firefighters wound around hills and hairpin turns on a makeshift single-lane road through rural villages pancaked by the disaster.
 
All along the 3.5-hour journey, children as young as four years old would scamper out of their “totally demolished” towns bearing curiosity and even smiles.
 
“They’ve got a kettle in their hands and a pot, they’re going to get water, and they’re waving to us saying ‘Hi’ like nothing is even affecting them,” said Lieut. Jeff Clark, as he emerged into the international arrivals area of Vancouver’s airport on Monday.
 
“It made us realize where we were at and how lucky we were to be in the position we were in.”
 
The team of unwashed but spirited men, including 22 firefighters from Burnaby and Mission, B.C., three doctors and three dogs, returned home to British Columbia after one week joining responders from around the globe in the intense search-and-rescue mission.
 
Co-ordinating the rescue of four hikers, including a Calgary woman and her friend from Australia, was a highlight among the devastation and futility they sometimes encountered in a country most members will remember for the stench of dead bodies.
 
Tamara McLeod, 24, was choppered out of a landslide in Langtang National Park, after the firefighters provided specific map co-ordinates obtained from a satellite phone, through a channel in Ottawa, to officials on the ground.
 
“We walked up to the lieutenant colonel and the major of the Nepalese army,” Clark recalled. “He says, ‘For you guys, no problem.'”
 
But along with the triumphs were many difficult moments.
 
Capt. Steve Leslie said the crew spent its final day in the 200-year-old historic district, west of the capital Kathmandu, attempting to help locals. He remembers people pleading for excavation, saying their family members were buried in the ruins of a seven-storey building.
 
The firefighters dug for more than two hours but found nothing.
 
“There were always emotions," said Leslie. "Feeling for the people. We came all that way to help the people. And sometimes the only way you could help them was to reassure them.”
 
The team was deployed to Nepal from B.C. within two days of the 7.8-magnitude quake, which has killed 7,300 people, injured thousands and left countless more missing. They were able to dispatch with lightning speed on account of a retired member who was already linked to international rescue efforts through the Canadian Medical Assistance Team.
 
Canada’s Disaster Assistance Response Team, known as DART, deployed on Saturday, nearly a week later.
 
“Our members are volunteers, so it’s different. They can go when they want,” said Burnaby Fire Chief Doug McDonald. “There’s no government-encompassing decisions that are made.”
 
Upon arrival, the team set up at the United Nations’ Urban Search and Rescue Camp adjoining the Kathmandu airport, with more than 4,000 other rescuers assembled from around the world. They took directions from the global body, which provided them a sector to search, along with local military personnel and an interpreter.
 
The team and the sniffer dogs conducted thorough assessments of buildings in its zone and marked rubble they believed to be concealing piles of bodies. The Nepalese army will carry out the removals.

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta Premier Pledges $20 Million To Fast-track Flood Claims From 2013

Alberta Premier Pledges $20 Million To Fast-track Flood Claims From 2013
HIGH RIVER, Alta. — The Alberta government is providing an extra $20 million to fast-track the remaining claims from the province's 2013 floods.

Alberta Premier Pledges $20 Million To Fast-track Flood Claims From 2013

Canadian Man Pleads Not Guilty To Aiding Suicide Attack That Killed US Soldiers

Canadian Man Pleads Not Guilty To Aiding Suicide Attack That Killed US Soldiers
NEW YORK — A Canadian man pleaded not guilty Saturday to U.S. charges that he sent money and provided other long-distance support to Tunisian jihadists believed responsible for a 2009 suicide attack in Iraq that killed five American soldiers.

Canadian Man Pleads Not Guilty To Aiding Suicide Attack That Killed US Soldiers

Missing Snowboarder Found After Three Nights In Backcountry In Whistler

Missing Snowboarder Found After Three Nights In Backcountry In Whistler
  WHISTLER, B.C. — A missing snowboarder has been found in good condition after spending three nights in the backcountry in Whistler, B.C.

Missing Snowboarder Found After Three Nights In Backcountry In Whistler

Former CBC host Jo-Ann Roberts Seeks Federal Green Party Nomination In Victoria

Former CBC host Jo-Ann Roberts Seeks Federal Green Party Nomination In Victoria
VICTORIA — A former CBC radio host hopes to take her fight for the embattled public broadcaster all the way to Parliament Hill.

Former CBC host Jo-Ann Roberts Seeks Federal Green Party Nomination In Victoria

RCMP Arrest Fushpinder Singh Brar Of Surrey In Historic Homicide Dating Back To 2006

RCMP Arrest Fushpinder Singh Brar Of Surrey In Historic Homicide Dating Back To 2006
SURREY, B.C. — Surrey RCMP say they have made an arrest in a historic homicide dating back to 2006. Mahdi Halane was shot in the neck following a confrontation at a gas station in October 2006.

RCMP Arrest Fushpinder Singh Brar Of Surrey In Historic Homicide Dating Back To 2006

Fire Victim In Chase, B.C., Was Charged In 2008 With Killing Husband

Fire Victim In Chase, B.C., Was Charged In 2008 With Killing Husband
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A woman who died in a mobile-home fire in Chase, B.C., last week was the victim in a domestic-dispute case in 2007 and charged with killing her husband less than a year later.

Fire Victim In Chase, B.C., Was Charged In 2008 With Killing Husband