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  • 19
    Sep
    2011
    1:47pm, EDT

    Death toll increases as rescuers try to reach Himalayan quake survivors

    Anupam Nath / AP

    An Indian girl who was injured in a building collapse that followed an earthquake is treated at a hospital in Siliguri, India on Sept. 19, 2011. Rescue workers in helicopters and earth movers raced Monday to reach Indian villages cut off by mudslides after Sunday's powerful earthquake damaged more than 100,000 homes in the remote Himalayan region, officials said.

    Msnbc.com news services report

    At least 25 people died in the northeastern Indian state of Sikkim, where the quake was centered near India's border with Nepal, police said.

    "The situation doesn't look good," an official from the U.N.'s disaster management team in New Delhi told Reuters. "My feeling is the death toll and number of injured are going to increase."

    "People are still panicky," Pawan Thapa, a resident of Gangtok, told Reuters by phone. "We spent the whole night outside our homes." Read more...

    EPA

    Part of a damaged and blocked road is seen in Gangtok, India.

    More news from South and Central Asia

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: india, quake, world-news
  • 14
    Mar
    2011
    2:22pm, EDT

    Taking shelter: Humanitarian crisis in quake-hit Japan

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    Elderly people warm themselves with blankets at a Japanese Red Cross hospital after being evacuated from the area hit by tsunami in Ishinomaki on Sunday, March 13. Japan faced a growing humanitarian crisis on Sunday after its devastating earthquake and tsunami left millions of people without water, electricity, homes or heat.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    People are given first aid at a Japanese Red Cross hospital on Sunday, after being evacuated from the area hit by tsunami in Ishinomaki.

    Kim Kyung-hoon / Reuters

    An evacuee who was injured during the earthquake and tsunami, at the Red Cross hospital in Ishinomaki on Monday.

    Kyodo News via AP

    A "HELP" sign is written on the ground of Ohara Primary School near a sea coast covered with the rubble in Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, northern Japan, on Monday, March 14, three days after a massive earthquake and the ensuing tsunami hit Japan's east coast.

    By Elena Grothe

    Reuters reports:

    Millions of people in Japan's devastated northeast were spending a fourth night without water, food or heating in near-freezing temperatures, as tens of thousands of rescue workers struggled to reach them.

    As bodies washed up on the coast, injured survivors, children and elderly crammed into makeshift shelters, often without medicine. By Monday, 550,000 people had been evacuated after the earthquake and tsunami that killed at least 10,000.

    The humanitarian crisis was unfolding on multiple fronts -- from a sudden rise in newly orphaned children to shortages of water, food, fuel and electricity to overflowing toilets in overwhelmed shelters and erratic care of traumatized survivors.

    "It is the elderly who have been hit the hardest," said Patrick Fuller of the International Federation of Red Cross, in a memo written from Ishinomaki, one of several coastal cities brutalized by the swirling wall of waves.

    "The tsunami engulfed half the town and many lie shivering uncontrollably under blankets. They are suffering from hypothermia having been stranded in their homes without water or electricity."

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: japan, red-cross, quake, earthquake, tsunami, evacuees, shelter, world-news
  • 11
    Mar
    2011
    9:48pm, EST

    Seattle man desperate to contact friends and students in Japan

    Photo courtesy Ben Erickson

    Benjamin Erickson (top center) poses with Ms. Fujiwara's Second Grade class at the Ninohe City Nisatai Elementary-Junior High in Ninohe, Japan, where he worked as a language teacher from 2006 to 2008. Now, living in Seattle, Erickson hasn't been able to contact his students or friends from Ninohe since Friday's earthquake struck Sendai, only 130 miles to the south of Ninohe.

    Seattle resident Benjamin Erickson used to teach English to students at a school in Ninohe, Japan, only 130 miles from the devastating quake. Now he desperately wants to hear from them.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: japan, quake, earthquake, international-news
  • 28
    Feb
    2011
    11:27pm, EST

    Phil Walter / Getty Images

    People stand togeather and comfort each other in Hagley Park as New Zealand holds two minutes' silence at 12.51pm local time to mark the time of last week's Christchurch earthquake on Tuesday, March 1 in Christchurch, New Zealand.

    New Zealand mourns quake victims with two minute silence

    By James Cheng

    See more photos out of New Zealand here.

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    Explore related topics: quake, new-zealand, christchurch
  • 24
    Feb
    2011
    6:11am, EST

    Aerial photographs show damage caused by Christchurch earthquake

    Torsten Blackwood / AFP - Getty Images

    Luxury homes stand on the edge of a landslide in the suburb of Sumner on Feb. 24 after a 6.3 earthquake devastated the city of Christchurch two days earlier.

    Torsten Blackwood / AFP - Getty Images

    A suburban street is covered with silt forced out of the ground by liquefaction on Feb. 24 after a 6.3 magnitude earthquake devastated the city of Christchurch two days earlier.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

     Follow the latest developments in Christchurch here and see more images in our slideshow.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: quake, earthquake, new-zealand, world-news, natural-disasters, christchurch, oceania, aerial, sumner
  • 23
    Feb
    2011
    5:48am, EST

    Survivors pulled from rubble 24 hours after Christchurch earthquake

    John Kirk-Anderson / Christchurch Press via Reuters

    Two men celebrate after being pulled out from a destroyed building in Christchurch Feb. 23. Rescuers pulled survivors out of rubble on Wednesday 24 hours after a devastating earthquake in Christchurch as the death toll climbed to 75, with many dozens still trapped inside collapsed buildings.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

     Read more on the search for survivors and see more pictures in our slideshow.

    2 comments

    What aboot the people still under Jack ?? Is the man missing a limb ???

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    Explore related topics: quake, earthquake, new-zealand, survivors, world-news, natural-disasters, christchurch, oceania
  • 21
    Feb
    2011
    8:42pm, EST

    6.3 quake rocks New Zealand city; fatalities reported

    Martin Hunter / Getty Images

    Debris from collapsed buildings crushed cars and littered the streets after an earthquake in Christchurch on Tuesday, Feb. 22.

    Don Scott / Christchurch Press via Reuters

    A four-story building lies in ruin in central Christchurch on Tuesday.

    Martin Hunter / Getty Images

    Rescuers search for survivors in a collapsed building on Manchester Street on Tuesday.

    Richard Cosgrove / Christchurch Press via Reuters

    A woman is rescued from inside a building after Tuesday's earthquake.

    Reuters TV

    People are evacuated from a damaged building after an earthquake in Christchurch, New Zealand on Tuesday, Feb. 22. A strong quake hit New Zealand's second-biggest city of Christchurch on Tuesday for the second time in five months, toppling buildings, causing fatalities and trapping people beneath rubble.

    By Jonathan Woods, msnbc.com

    A 6.3-magnitude earthquake Tuesday rocked the southern New Zealand city of Christchurch, collapsing buildings, cracking streets and causing multiple fatalities and serious injuries.

    Live video footage showed streets strewn with bricks and shattered concrete. Sidewalks and roads were cracked and split, and hundreds of dazed, screaming and crying residents wandered as sirens blared throughout the city. Water mains had burst, causing extensive flooding.

    The epicenter Tuesday was located in the "worst possible location" for city residents, New Zealand's GeoNet Center data manager Kevin Fenaughty told the New Zealand Herald. Continue reading...

    3 comments

    Disaster have no rules. It was the second time a major quake hit the city of 350,000 in five months. Videos I get at was very shocking. Tuesday's 6.3-magnitude temblor struck closer to downtown than a quake that heavily damaged Christchurch last September but caused no deaths when it struck before  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: quake, earthquake, new-zealand, aftershock, tremor, jwoods
  • 12
    Jan
    2011
    1:40pm, EST

    Haiti marks anniversary of catastrophic earthquake

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Haitians walk through the destroyed Port-au-Prince cathedral during services in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Wednesday, Jan 12. Today marks the one-year anniversary of the magnitude 7.0 Haitian earthquake.

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    People pray during a service near the Presidential Palace in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Wednesday. Haitians remembered the anniversary with prayer services and other events in memory of the hundreds of thousands killed last year.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    A woman wakes up on a street in Port-au-Prince on Wednesday. As Haitians mark the anniversary on Wednesday of the earthquake that flattened much of the capital Port-au-Prince, hopes that a better nation could rise from the rubble have given way to a crushing sense of bitterness and despair.

    By Jonathan Woods, msnbc.com

    Today marks the one-year anniversary since an earthquake took the lives of hundreds of thousands died and decimated entire communities.

    The pictures were- and continue to be- heart wrenching. Haitians have been picking up the pieces to restore their nation. Take a look at where the country is now.

    Slideshow - Haiti: One year after the earthquake

    Story - Year 'was hell for us': Will Haiti be rebuilt?

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Elena Grothe

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com

Jim Seida

Jim Seida is a senior multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Fourteen years ago, he helped create multimedia storytelling for an online audience as one of the core group of multimedia producers at msnbc.com. He thrives on field work and telling stories about people with video, still and audio gear.

James Cheng

is a senior multimedia editor at msnbc.com, producing pictures and video since 1996.

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David R Arnott

is NBCNews.com's Multimedia Editor in London.

Jonathan Woods

Jonathan Woods worked for msnbc.com for three years, ending in 2012. For six years prior he worked as a photojournalist and multimedia producer for four newspapers across the U.S., including the Rocky Mountain News in Denver. Woods earned his B.A. in photojournalism from Western Kentucky University. He is now working for TIME Magazine, leading a team of picture editors online for TIME.com.

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