Headlines
Nepal quake takes heavy toll of Hindu temples
Kathmandu, April 26
The devastating earthquake
in Nepal has destroyed or badly damaged many Hindu temples both in the
Kathmandu Valley and elsewhere.
Saturday's 7.9 magnitude quake
and aftershocks throughout the day destroyed around 80 percent of the
temples in Basantapur Durbar Square in Kathmandu, the Kantipur News
reported on Sunday.
These include the Kasthamandap temple, the Panchtale temple, the Dasa Avtar temple and the Krishna temple.
Kasthamandap, which inspired the name Kathmandu, is an early 16th century wooden monument.
Eighty percent of Nepal's nearly 29 million people are Hindus. Buddhists account for 10 percent and Muslims four percent.
Siobhan
Heanue, a reporter with ABC News Australia, told CNN that she was
wandering at an ancient temple complex in Kathmandu when the earthquake
struck. Several temples collapsed around her.
Scores of
centuries-old historical monuments, including the iconic Dharahara tower
here, were reduced to rubble in the powerful tremblor that claimed more
than 2,000 lives.
A few monuments, including the Kumari temple and the Taleju Bhawani, have partially collapsed, the Kantipur daily said.
Dozens of temples and historical buildings in Patan and Bhaktapur have also collapsed or have been partially damaged.
The
report said the top of the Jay Bageshwori temple at Gaushala and parts
of the famed Pashupatinath temple, Swyambhunath, Boudhanath Stupa and
Ratna Mandir have suffered partially damage.
In Patan, the Char
Narayan Mandir, the Taleju Temple, the Hari Shankar temple and Uma
Maheshwor temple have suffered destruction. And so has the
Machhindranath temple at Bungmati, it added.
Several bodies,
including those of women and children, were recovered from the remains
of the collapsed monuments, the daily said.
Rescue teams said at
least 70 bodies were recovered from the debris of the Dharahara tower
and more bodies from the remains of the temples in Durbar Square.
The
Durbar Square is one of the most popular tourist hotspots in Kathmandu,
for foreign and domestic tourists. It is a favourite hangout place for
locals.
In Tripureshwor, the Kal Mochan Ghat, a
Mughal-architecture inspired temple, was destroyed and the nearby
Tripura Sundari temple also suffered significant damage, the daily said.
In Bhaktapur, several monuments, including the Fasi Deva
temple, the Chardham temple and the 17th century Vatsala Durga Temple
were fully or partially destroyed, it said.
"Outside the Valley,
the Manakamana Temple in Gorkha, the Gorkha Durbar, the Palanchowk
Bhagwati in Kavrepalan Chowk, the Rani Mahal in Palpa, the Janaki Mandir
in Janakpur, the Churiyamai in Makwanpur, the Dolakha Bhimsensthan in
Dolakha and the Nuwakot Durbar were partially destroyed."
The
newspaper quoted Prushottam Lochan Shrestha, a historian, as saying that
these monuments had been lost forever as rebuilding them was
technically difficult and expensive.
“We have lost most of the
monuments that had been designated as World Heritage Sites in Kathmandu,
Bhaktapur and Lalitpur," he said. "They can't be restored to their
original state."