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The BBC's Stephen Sackur
"The grim task of recovering the dead goes on"
 real 56k

Oxfam International, Carolina Castrillo
"People here are really traumatised"
 real 28k

Friday, 16 February, 2001, 07:00 GMT
Homeless problems worsen in Salvador
A funeral in Candelaria, El Salvador
Funerals continue from Tuesday's quake
More than 130,000 people have been made homeless by this week's earthquake in El Salvador, according to the country's National Emergency Committee.

Taken together with January's earthquake, in which more than a million lost their homes, a quarter of the population of the country are now believed to be without shelter.

At least 283 people died and nearly 3,000 were injured on Tuesday as the quake struck 15km (10 miles) south-east of the capital, San Salvador.

Woman being treated on hospital floor
Hospitals have little room for the injured
Medical centres throughout the country, already overwhelmed by the thousands injured in last month's quake, are struggling to care for the additional victims.

The government of El Salvador has made an urgent appeal for international aid as hospitals find themselves critically short of beds, blood and medicine.

And rescue teams trying to reach communities cut off by landslides have called for more helicopters and excavating machinery to dig out victims.

Vice President Carlos Quintanilla said the international aid received so far was insufficient.

''We can't do it with just the resources of the state and Salvadorans,'' he said.


The French news agency AFP said that the rapid response to January's earthquake has not been repeated, possibly because the earthquake in the Indian state of Gujarat in the intervening period had strained international resources.

Tuesday's tremor hit as people in El Salvador were trying to re-build their lives after last month's earthquake, which left more than 1,000 dead and caused $1bn worth of damage.

At 6.1 on the Richter scale, it was smaller than January's quake but caused huge damage because its epicentre was on land rather than under the ocean.

In one of the worst-hit villages, Candelaria in central El Salvador, at least 39 people were killed and 1,300 houses were destroyed.

Rescue workers pulled out the bodies of five small children from the wreckage of the local school.

As least 22 children and their 25-year-old teacher - found with her arms wrapped around some of the children - died there, say the authorities.

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See also:

15 Feb 01 | Americas
Quake areas 'near panic'
14 Feb 01 | World
Deadly history of earthquakes
30 Mar 99 | Medical notes
Analysis: Natural disasters
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