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Pakistan Aids Quake-Ridden India
By RAMOLA TALWAR, Associated Press Writer
AHMEDABAD, India (AP) - Pakistan put aside its bitter rivalry with India on Tuesday and joined earthquake relief efforts, but heavy equipment and explosives brought in to clear debris signaled that hope of finding survivors had all but vanished.
Experts say few people could survive more than 100 hours buried in rubble left by Friday's temblor, and much of the attention shifted to getting tents, blankets and medical care to the living.
Officials have counted 7,148 bodies, but estimates of how high the death toll could rise varied widely. Defense Minister George Fernandes estimated 100,000 may have died; Home Minister Haren Pandya said he believed the figure to be between 15,000 and 20,000.
Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee said it was impossible and improper to guess.
Aid from around the world was pouring into western India: a 747 loaded with water purification equipment from the United States, a $500,000 mobile hospital from Denmark and an air force plane filled with tents and blankets from Pakistan. With nighttime temperatures about 41 degrees in the quake zone, blankets were a high priority.
``I have come on a humanitarian mission,'' said Ilyas Khan, director of Pakistan's emergency relief agency, adding: ``People are suffering.''
Pakistan, which has fought three wars with India and is locked in a nuclear Cold War with its rival, said a second relief plane would be sent Wednesday and a third on Thursday.
Friday's magnitude-7.9 quake flattened the towns of Bhuj and Anjar in India's western Gujarat state, which borders Pakistan, leaving damage estimated at up to $5.5 billion. Despite aftershocks with magnitudes ranging up to 4.5 in the Bhuj area, there were no reports of new damage or casualties.
Rescue workers kept up the dark task of digging into the debris of ruined buildings, but they called the search for survivors increasingly futile. With Tuesday afternoon passed the critical 100-hour mark since the quake struck.
``We talk about a limit of 100 hours, when after that the chances of finding someone alive drop dramatically,'' said Jochen Jakowski, the leader of a German rescue team in Anjar. ``It is close to a world record if we find someone after 100 hours.''
A spokesman for a Swiss search and rescue team said his workers were still going at full strength in Ahmedabad , Gujarat's commercial center. However, they withdrew from Bhuj after failing to find any survivors there Tuesday.
``The chances of finding someone are very, very slight, although we haven't given up hope entirely,'' Joachim Ahrens, spokesman for the Swiss Department of Development and Cooperation, said from Geneva.
In the wreckage, however, there were a few miracles Tuesday. Among them was 16-year-old Ketan Rathod, pulled from the rubble alive in Anjar, where he was caught under concrete with his dead grandmother for 96 hours. And British experts pulled a 24-year-old man out of his destroyed home in Bhuj.
James Brown, head of the British search and rescue team, said the successful recovery inspired the team to continue its efforts for at least another 24 hours.
But workers in Anjar were also beginning to use heavy equipment to clear the debris - a sign that they no longer fear injuring anyone still trapped alive. In Ahmedabad, soldiers used explosives to bring down teetering buildings that endangered the living.
The stench of death was everywhere. Mourners wore face coverings as they watched victims be cremated; soldiers burned incense as they persevered in the grim work of looking for bodies.
Much of the rescue work was being carried out by some of the 20,000 troops India sent to respond to the disaster. The national government pledged money to help Gujarat recover, and Indians across the nation were also digging into their pockets to contribute.
U.S. Embassy spokesman Gordon Duguid said the 747 - which was also carrying blankets and other aid - was too big to land in Bhuj, so its cargo would be broken up into smaller loads and ferried to Gujarat on Indian air force planes. The United States has pledged $5 million in emergency supplies.
The International Red Cross on Tuesday started a massive relief operation and appealed for $15.8 million in aid. The U.N. Children's Fund said it would provide at least $8 million immediately.