The 62-strong China International Search and Rescue Team arrives in Nepal on Sunday to carry out humanitarian rescue following a massive earthquake struck the country, April 26, 2015. (Photo: China News Service/Fu Yongkang)
The 62-strong China International Search and Rescue Team arrived in Nepal on Sunday to carry out humanitarian mission following a massive earthquake struck the country. [Special coverage]
Shankar Koirala, Nepal's joint secretary of the Office of the Prime Minister and the Council of Ministers, warmly welcomed the Chinese team at the Kathmandu airport, terming their arrival as a timely assistance.
The joint secretary said his country will do its best to facilitate the Chinese team so that they will rescue as many Nepali people as they can.
Chinese Ambassador to Nepal Wu Chuntai wished the Chinese team success in carrying out their assignment.
The death toll from a powerful earthquake which struck Nepal at midday on Saturday has climbed to 1,896 including 723 in the Nepal 's capital Kathmandu, a senior government official told Xinhua on Sunday morning. The powerful earthquake jolted central, western, mid-western and far-western parts of Nepal, leaving tens and hundreds of people injured and causing damage to properties worth over billions of U. S. dollars.
The 7.9-magnitude earthquake, which was followed by at least 14 aftershocks, also jolted parts of India, and was felt in Bangladesh and Pakistan.
Four Chinese nationals, including two workers with a Chinese company, a mountain climber and a tourist, were killed and five others seriously injured in the quake, the Chinese Embassy confirmed.
Rescue operations are underway by the Nepal Army, Police and Armed Police Force but they are slow in the remote areas of the country due to lack of equipment.
An emergency cabinet meeting has announced 29 districts in the country as crisis zones, according to the Home Ministry.
Amid the devastating disaster, the government of Nepal has appealed for assistance from the international community.