KATHMANDU, Nepal –
Marine Corps MV-22 Ospreys soared over
Nepal on Tuesday as the U.S. announced $11 million more in aid for the
devastated nation.
Speaking at a U.S. Embassy compound in Kathmandu, Alfonso
Lenhardt, acting administrator for the U.S. Agency for International
Development, announced the additional funds for earthquake response, which
brings total U.S. humanitarian assistance to $26 million.
The Himalayan country is still digging out from the
magnitude-7.9 earthquake that rocked the countryside on April 25. The death
toll has reached 7,500.
Three Air Force C-17 cargo planes were due to land in
Kathmandu on Tuesday night to deliver two more UH-1 Huey helicopters, officials
said. One Huey and four Ospreys arrived in Nepal on Sunday.
Marine Col. John Armellino, deputy commander of the U.S.
military task force in Nepal, said the tilt-rotor Ospreys can reach most areas
they are needed but added: "We can't execute our mission until the relief
supplies come in. You need to execute that portion of the mission first."
The U.S. is flying in hygiene kits but sourcing other aid
locally. Air Force personnel will soon start to help with logistics at
Kathmandu's airport to improve its efficiency, officials said.
One of the Osprey pilots in Nepal - Marine Maj. Arturo
Guzman - said the aircraft flew Monday and Tuesday, spending five hours in the
sky and moving 2 tons of gear and some USAID representatives.
The mission is the first test of some of the aircraft's
capabilities, he said.
"The biggest challenge is the altitude," he
said. "We have half the (rotor) blade size of any other helicopter in the
inventory, but we carry three times the weight."
In plane mode, the Osprey can cruise at 25,000 feet -
lower than some of Nepal's mountains, including Mount Everest, the world's
tallest. In helicopter mode the aircraft can hover at 12,000 feet, an altitude
at which it can carry only a couple of passengers, Guzman said.
On the ground in Bhaktapur, a city not far from
Kathmandu, locals face years of work to repair or replace their damaged homes.
The city center, which includes buildings dating to the 14th century, was a
popular tourist spot before the disaster. Ram Dahl, 40, a guide there, said his
home was destroyed but his family survived and is living in tents.
Dahl has been showing rescue workers around the temple
and ruins since the disaster, but he's worried that tourists won't come back.
Six hundred people in the city of 100,000 died in the
earthquake. Funeral pyres have sent smoke wafting out of a cremation platform
beside the river for days, he said.
Many of the Bhaktapur's ancient statues and temples have
been damaged, but the tallest - the five-story Nyatapola Temple, dedicated to
the goddess of prosperity Siddhi Laksmi - survived intact. To reach its base
visitors must climb a set of steps past statues of wrestlers, elephants, lions,
griffins and the goddesses Singhini and Baghini. Each creature is supposed to
be 10 times stronger than the one below it, Dahl said.
Nearby a giant golden chariot, brought out for the Hindu
New Year celebrations on April 15, is still parked in the street.
Another building to survive the earthquake was the
Dattatreya Temple, which dates back to the 15th century. Dedicated to
Hinduism's Supreme Triumvirate - Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva - it was built from a
single tree 700 years ago, Dahl said.
The worst damage in Bhaktapur is in the streets
surrounding the city center, where entire neighborhoods are now massive piles
of bricks and dust.
Another who lost his home in the city is Kul-Budez
Kustra, 48. His mother, who was inside the family home, was crushed to death,
but the rest of the family survived. Now Kustra, his wife, children and sister
are camped out on the edge of town.
They split their time between farming their land and
removing bricks from the massive pile where their house used to stand. The
family has enough to eat and drink, Kustra said, but added, "We haven't
had any help from the government."