[Nepal] - Teams released to disperse help to catastrophe survivors in Kavre

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
KATHMANDU, OCTOBER 5Various teams have been mobilized to assist households severely affected by last week's floods and
landslides triggered by continuous rain in the district.
Death toll from recent floods and landslides reaches 233, 169
missing
Rescuers search for missing people in Nepal following flooding and
landslides that killed 224 In line with the
federal government's announcement, teams have been deployed across five local levels to provide relief funds to families who lost loved ones
in the disasters.The hardest-hit areas include Panauti Municipality, Bethanchok Rural Municipality, Roshi Rural Municipality, Namobuddha
Municipality, and Mandandeupur Municipality, where the highest number of fatalities occurred. The team, led by Chief
District Officer and Coordinator of the District Disaster Management Committee, Umesh Kumar Dhakal, has begun distributing monetary
assistance to the affected families in Banepa and Panauti
According to Dhakal, the aid will be delivered directly to the survivors' doorsteps.Assistant Chief District Officer Subash Poudel stated
that each family that lost a member will receive Rs 200,000 in relief funds from the federal government, with an additional Rs 100,000
provided if there were multiple fatalities in the family.On Friday, the government declared several local levels in the district as
disaster-hit crisis zones to prioritize relief distribution and reconstruction efforts
Roshi, Temal, Bethanchok, Chaunrideurali, and Mahabharat Rural Municipalities, along with Panauti, Namobuddha, and Mandandeupur
Municipalities, were included in the crisis zone declaration for a period of three months.A total of 72 people lost their lives in
landslides across 13 local levels in the district
According to the District Police Office, five people remain missing, and 75 others are injured
Among the deceased, one was a foreign national, and another a woman from Ramechhap district.Transport services are yet to resume in several
damaged road sections, and disaster-hit areas are still in need of electricity and communication services.
This article first appeared/also appeared in https://thehimalayantimes.com