Thousands spend night outdoors in Nepal after the Friday earthquake
In all, 157 people died and more than 300 were injured in the quake.
Officials say search and rescue missions are coming to a close.
The focus now is on providing shelter to the homeless and arranging essential supplies. But rescue teams did not have enough tents.
Thousands of people who lost their homes slept under the open sky or in makeshift tents in freezing temperatures overnight.
One sufferer, who lost her sister in the earthquake, shared her grief: "We have been forced to live in this situation. We have lost everything. There is no food and no shelter. My sister left us all. We need help."
Relief efforts are focused on the more remote parts of the two districts worst hit by the 6.3-magnitude earthquake - Jajarkot and Rukum West.
Stories of horrifying experiences, miraculous escapes, close calls and the devastating loss of family members and friends are coming in.
Baljit Mahar, who lost his seven-year-old son, is one of them.
"We could not save him, while all the other six members of the family were able to rush out as soon as the earthquake jolted us from our sleep," Mahar told Reuters in the remote village of Chiuri in the hilly Jajarkot district.
He pulled his son's body from the crumbled façade of their single-storey mud and stone house.
"All my belongings and clothes are under the debris, I have been left without anything," Mahar added.
Another survivor from Rukum, Baljeet BK, pleaded for government assistance to shelter the now-homeless people:
"There is no food to eat and no shelter to stay in. People are staying outside in the open. We have to stay in this cold. Entire houses have gone away."
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