Beijing - Troops walked Tuesday to towns and villages near
the epicentre of a devastating earthquake that killed about 12,000
people and cut off tens of thousands in south-western China as at
least 10,000 people were buried in one city.
The Civil Affairs Ministry said the death toll had risen to 11,921
since a quake measuring 7.8 on the Richter scale caused widespread
damage Monday to south-western China.
About 60,000 people in Sichuan province's Wenchuan county had been
out of contact with authorities since Monday while the State
Seismological Bureau reported a 6.1-magnitude aftershock in Wenchuan
Tuesday afternoon.
All roads to Wenchuan were blocked, but Premier Wen Jiabao, who
was overseeing relief work 100 kilometres away in Dujiangyan county,
ordered an all-out effort to open a route to Wenchuan as soon as
possible, the official Xinhua news agency said.
Some troops had set off on foot to Wenchuan from Dujiangyan and
other nearby counties despite heavy rain and aftershocks, the agency
said.
About 1,300 rescue and relief troops arrived mid-afternoon in
Wenchuan's Yinxiu township, 20 kilometres from Dujiangyan, as part of
about 50,000 troops and police sent to Sichuan and other affected
areas.
Military doctors and soldiers began searching for survivors and
treating injured people in Yingxiu, but it was unclear when the first
rescuers would reach Wenchuan county town.
Military planes planned to bring back aerial photographs of the
disaster area, but it was still impossible to land planes or
helicopters in Wenchuan.
State media said the heavy rain Tuesday had also forced the Army
to cancel a plan to drop paratroopers into Wenchuan.
'There is still no news about the situation in the townships of
Yingxiu, Wolong and Xuankou, which are located exactly at the
epicentre,' Wang Bin, county secretary of China's ruling Communist
Party, told Xinhua earlier by satellite telephone.
Wang said that the three townships had a total population of more
than 24,000.
The county, which has a population of about 105,000, had confirmed
at least 57 dead and more than 300 seriously injured after the
earthquake, Wang said.
It was only a 'rough number of casualties at the county seat,' he
told the agency.
'The figure is highly possible to rise as the casualties in the
mountainous area is not available,' he said.
Wang said that more than 30,000 people were camped outside despite
heavy rain.
'We are in urgent need of tents, food, medicine and satellite
communications equipment through air drop,' he said. 'We also need
medical workers to save the injured people here.'
Hundreds more people are feared dead in other areas of Sichuan
after they were buried in collapsed schools and factories.
The local government of Mianzhu reported that thousands of people
were buried and 2,000 had been confirmed dead, Xinhua said.
Nearby Beichuan county earlier reported that 3,000 to 5,000 people
were feared dead after the earthquake caused 80 per cent of its
buildings to collapse.
About 1,000 children and teachers were believed to be trapped
under rubble after school buildings collapsed in Beichuan.
Hundreds of others were still buried under debris from two
chemical factories in Sichuan's Shifang city, state television said.
The central government allocated 860 million yuan (123 million
dollars) for relief operations while the Chinese Red Cross collected
65 million yuan (9 million dollars), and donations were promised by
many foreign governments.
The earthquake struck at 2:28 pm (0628 GMT) Monday in Wenchuan
county, 95 kilometres west-north-west of Chengdu, and could be felt
in cities hundreds of kilometres away, including Beijing, Shanghai,
Hong Kong and Bangkok.
It was the deadliest earthquake in China since 1976 when an
estimated 242,000 people died in the northern city of Tangshan near
Beijing.
www.nikeperson.comMay 13th, 2008 - 10:40:22
wish the best for China !
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