The only buildings remaining are the properly engineered ones which were built recently: the school and a medical clinic.
"[1] Kanatbek Abdrakhmatov, head of the Institute of Seismology, attributed much of the destruction due to inferior construction of the buildings, many of which were built out of clay and straw.
[1] The injured were paid 5,000 Kyrgyzstani soms (US$ 136) and three tons of coal, and families of the dead received 50 kg of flour.
[12] One hundred mobile homes were transported to Nura, and the village was to be rebuilt in the spring of 2009 with a completion date set for August 2009.
[12] Uzbekistan pledged the equivalent of US$200,000 in humanitarian aid, including 120 tons of cement, as well as other building materials.