Nepal earthquake: IAF plane brings back 55 stranded Indians

IAF aircraft -- IL-76 and C-17 -- have also been sent to Kathmandu

Update: 2015-04-25 23:23 GMT
Volunteers carry an injured boy after rescuing him from the debris of a building that was damaged in an earthquake in Kathmandu. (Photo: AP)

New Delhi/Kathmandu: An Indian Air Forceaircraft tonight brought back 55 stranded Indians, including four infants, from the earthquake-hit Nepal.

The aircraft C-130J, which had earlier flown National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) members and relief materials from New Delhi to Kathmandu, landed here with 55 Indian evacuees at around 10.45 PM, Defense Ministry spokesperson said.

Earlier, External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Vikas Swarup had said that besides C-130J, two other IAF aircraft -- IL-76 and C-17 -- have also been sent to Kathmandu to ferry Indian nationals stuck in the Nepalese capital.

While IL-76 has flown 153 NDRF members along with 28 tonnes of relief material to Kathmanadu, the C-17 aircraft had 96 NDRF members with 15 tonnes of relief material onboard.

Read: Nepal earthquake: Daughter of Indian embassy employee killed as house collapses

The two aircraft are expected to bring back 100 Indians each and were likely to land here either late tonight or tomorrow, he said. Nepal was struck by the worst earthquake in 80 years, leaving nearly 1,500 people dead in flattened houses and buildings.

The quake measuring 7.9 on Richter scale, which was followed by 16 aftershocks of magnitude 4.5 or greater, striking heavy casualties in Kathmandu and injuring thousand others. Hundreds were feared missing across the country.

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