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Quake victims fight for food shipments

2 weeks pass without relief

GHANOOL, Pakistan — About 200 desperate people pushed and fought each other for milk, bread and biscuits brought in by mule train today — the first aid to reach their distant mountain village since Pakistan's earthquake left them homeless two weeks ago.

A helicopter carrying more supplies turned back after seeing the chaos below in the remote settlement of Ghanool in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province.

In other mountain villages, survivors were still crying out for shelter from the frigid weather. The Oct. 8 quake left some 3.3 million people homeless and killed nearly 80,000.

"It's horrible," said Hanna Mattinen, an aid worker with the group Action Against Hunger in the village of Paras, which needed 1,000 tents but only had 150. Men were forced to sleep outside, while women and children shared the tents.

"The needs are just indescribable," Mattinen said.

In Kashmir, snow has begun to fall in high mountains, and temperatures are dipping below freezing in some villages at night. Aid workers fear casualties will rise because communities are without adequate food, shelter or health care.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan offered $150 million in cash and aid after he surveyed the devastation today by helicopter with Pakistan's Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz.

"We will do whatever is possible to assist you in this crisis," Erdogan said in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani-controlled Kashmir.

The pledge made Turkey the biggest single donor nation so far in a faltering relief effort.

U.N. relief coordinator Jan Egeland says the U.N. has received only 27 percent of its appeal for $312 million in quake relief — compared with 80 percent pledged within 10 days of a similar appeal to international donors after the South Asian tsunami.

Egeland called on NATO countries to launch "a second Berlin airlift," referring to the nonstop flights by Western pilots into West Berlin in the late 1940s when Soviet forces sealed off the city.

He said the logistics of aid in the freezing, mountainous and remote Himalayan region were more complicated than the efforts following the Dec. 26 earthquake and tsunami, which killed more than 176,000 people.

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