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U.S. Marines Arrive In Nepal To Aid Earthquake Victims

US Air Force V-22 Osprey aircrafts arrive at the Tribhuvan International airport in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Sunday. Runway damage forced Nepalese authorities to close the main airport Sunday to large aircraft delivering aid to millions of people following the massive earthquake.
Niranjan Shrestha AP
US Air Force V-22 Osprey aircrafts arrive at the Tribhuvan International airport in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Sunday. Runway damage forced Nepalese authorities to close the main airport Sunday to large aircraft delivering aid to millions of people following the massive earthquake.

United States Marines have arrived in Nepal, where a 7.8 magnitude earthquake killed more than 7,000 people.

Reporting from Katmandu, NPR's Julie McCarthy says that Brig. Gen. Paul Kennedy, the commanding general of the III Marine Expeditionary Brigade stationed in Okinawa, tells her the Marines come with four MV-22 Osprey aircraft that should make it much easier to reach remote areas.

Kennedy said that at this point the rescue phase of the operation is coming to an end, so this mission will be mostly about providing aide.

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"Probably the most pressing need is shelter," he said. "We're going to start pushing these shelters out to the most remote areas so people can get under cover before these monsoons kick in in about six weeks."

Meanwhile, Western nations have been complaining that aid has been slow to reach victims of the quake because of government bureaucracy.

The New York Times reports that despite the emergency, the Nepalese government has insisted on following regular customs procedures. The paper reports:

"'The bottleneck was the fact that the bureaucratic procedures were just so heavy,' Jamie McGoldrick, the United Nations resident coordinator, said in an interview. 'So many layers of government and so many departments involved, so many different line ministries involved. We don't need goods sitting in Kathmandu warehouses. We don't need goods sitting at the airport. We need them up in the affected areas.'

"The United States ambassador to Nepal, Peter W. Bodde, said he had spoken to Nepal's prime minister, Sushil Koirala, about the issue and 'he assured me that all the red tape will be stopped.'"

Kennedy told Julie the U.S. was only worried about being ready to deploy the minute they were invited in by the Nepalese government.

"We don't want to bull our way in just because we're ready, they may not be ready to receive us. So we want to make sure that we maintain the relationships that have been forged over the years. And that when they call, that our response isn't slow because we were not ready. We don't feel as though we came late to this party," Kennedy said. "We feel as though when they asked for us to come and they were ready to receive us, that we were on the spot."

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