This Article is From May 03, 2015

Nepal to Send Back 4,050 Foreign Rescue Personnel

Nepal to Send Back 4,050 Foreign Rescue Personnel

A Nepali man sits on rubble during rescue operations following the earthquake. (Reuters)

Kathmandu: Nepal's disaster panel on Sunday recommended that 4,050 foreign rescue and search personnel be sent back as its own security personnel can handle the task of recovering the remaining bodies of people killed in the April 25 earthquake, an official said.

The decision was taken at a meeting of the Central Natural Disaster Committee headed by Deputy Prime Minister Bamdev Gautam, who also holds the home portfolio.

"At the meeting, it has decided to send back all foreign rescue and search teams back as their mission is almost complete. Very few dead bodies are likely to remain in the rubble which our own security agencies are enough to handle," home ministry spokesperson Laxmi Prasad Dhakal told IANS after the meeting.

After sending these foreign personnel back with appreciation and gratitude, only some hundred people engaged in relief distribution would remain inside the country.

The decision has been forwarded to the cabinet a meeting of which was likely to take place on Monday to take a final call in the matter.

"We will extend thanks to these personnel for their contribution," said Dhakal.

As many as 4,050 search and rescue experts from 34 countries were engaged in the search and rescue bid that were on for the last eight days.

They conducted the search and rescue bids in big structures, said Dhakal, adding that Nepalese agencies are now capable to handle search and rescue efforts in small structures.

In the aftermath of the quake, an emergency meeting of the cabinet on April 25 had called on the international community to dispatch search and rescue teams to Nepal.

A total 129 sniffer dogs were also deployed in the search and rescue effort. The international practice is that search and rescue teams should leave the affected countries within seven days.

Search and rescue teams from India, China, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Turkey, Bangladesh, Israel, the Netherlands, Bhutan, Poland, the US, Japan, Malaysia, France, Spain, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand, Belgium, Russia, Norway, Britain, Canada, Switzerland and Canada assisted in the post-quake operations. The UAE, Jordan, Sweden, Oman and Indonesia also sent their teams.
 
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