Key facts about Nepal quake, one week on

Key facts about Nepal quake, one week on
Updated on

Summary More than 3.5 million people are estimated to be in need of food assistance

KATHMANDU (AFP) - A week on from a 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck Nepal, flattening large parts of the capital Kathmandu and causing devastation across the impoverished Himalayan nation, here are some key facts about the disaster.

 

- Death toll -

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- 6,621 people are known to have died in Nepal alone and 14,023 others were injured

- More than 100 people were killed in neighbouring India and China

- 18 climbers died at Mount Everest base camp when the quake sparked an avalanche

- Two Americans, an Australian, a Japanese and a Chinese national were among the victims on the mountain

- 1,000 European Union citizens are missing, the EU says

- 12 others from EU countries have been confirmed dead

 

- Survivors -

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- Eight million people, or around a quarter of Nepal s population, have been affected, the United Nations estimates

- 2.8 million Nepalese were displaced

- More than 3.5 million people are estimated to be in need of food assistance

- 1.7 million children are in need of humanitarian aid in the worst-hit areas, according to UNICEF

 

- Aid -

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- Rescuers from 22 countries are involved in the relief effort while $61 million has been pledged, according to the UN

- Britain has promised $15 million

- $12.5 million has been pledged by the United States

- $15 million is being released from the UN s emergency fund

- The UN has appealed for $415 million while UNICEF is seeking to raise $50.35 million

- The United Nations  Food and Agricultural Organization has appealed for $8 million for farmers

- The World Food Programme says it needs US$116.5 million to provide food for 1.4 million people

 

- Reconstruction -

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- 160,786 homes were destroyed and another 143,673 damaged

- The UN says that up to 90 percent of health facilities in four districts were severely damaged

- Some 16,000 schools were damaged

- Reconstruction costs could top $5 billion -- around 20 percent of the country s GDP -- according to business research consultancy IHS