| Quake survivors facing relief shortages(AP)
 Updated: 2005-10-11 19:52
 
 India's prime minister acknowledged Tuesday that many survivors of the 
powerful South Asian earthquake in Indian-ruled Kashmir don't have enough tents 
and medicine. 
 Officials said the death toll in Indian Kashmir from Saturday's 7.6-magnitude 
quake had reached 1,005 — including 934 civilians and 71 defense personnel. 
 Touring the devastated areas for the first time Tuesday, Prime Minister 
Manmohan Singh assured thousands of victims that the government would help them 
restart their lives. 
 "I am aware of the shortage of tents and inadequate medical facilities. We 
will do our best to organize these facilities for you," Singh said after meeting 
survivors in Uri, the worst-affected area of Indian Kashmir. 
 He pledged an additional $111 million in assistance on top of the $31.5 
million already promised by his government for relief and rehabilitation in the 
Himalayan territory 
 The region, India's only Muslim-majority state, also has suffered from an 
Islamic separatist insurgency that has killed more than 66,000 people since 
1989. 
 On Monday, Kashmir's biggest militant group, the Hezb-ul-Mujahedeen, offered 
to suspend violence, while other nonviolent separatist groups joined relief 
efforts, distributing milk, food and blankets. 
 The bulk of the relief effort, however, has been led by the government and 
army, which has more than a half million soldiers posted in the territory 
because of the insurgency. 
 Army planes have been dropping food, medicines and shrouds — required by 
Islam for burial — from the air to inaccessible mountain villages. In addition, 
some 5,000 tents have been provided, far short of the 15,000 
needed. 
 
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