A woman looks over at her destroyed house in Gucheng village in Longmen county
of southwestern China's Sichuan province, April 21, 2013.
BEIJING — Rescue teams in
southwestern China continue to search for survivors of Saturday's earthquake,
despite heavy rainstorms that have hampered the effort to reach victims.
A massive search and rescue effort is underway in Sichuan Province, a day after
an earthquake flattened buildings and sent panicked residents into the
streets. Chinese state media report more than 200 killed and more than
10,000 injured. Those figures are expected to rise as rescue teams reach
remote villages in the mountainous region.
Luo Tongyang, a search and rescue volunteer, is less than 10 kilometers away
from the epicenter of the quake, near the city of Ya’an.
He says there are five- or six-hundred people, including the elderly and the
children, who are in the streets and will not go back into their homes.
The U.S. Geological Survey measured the earthquake at 6.6 magnitude, while
Chinese authorities say the magnitude was 7.0. Aftershocks persisted for
several hours. The earthquake was centered less than 100 miles from the
provincial capital of Chengdu.
Cheng Dongning, a volunteer in Chengdu, says the city has not set up
tents. She says since the 2008 earthquake, construction has improved in
Chengdu and homes there are safe.
The massive 2008 quake in Sichuan left more than 87,000 people dead or
missing. The collapse of government schools during that quake led to
widespread protests of poor building construction.
Late Saturday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang arrived via helicopter to oversee
rescue efforts. State media say China’s Ministry of Civil Affairs has
dispatched 30,000 tents, 50,000 cotton blankets and 10,000 makeshift beds to
the area.
Luo Tongyang says volunteers are providing people with food and tents, but do
not have enough supplies. Luo also says there is no place to shelter
victims from inclement weather.
Rainstorms have caused more landslides in the region, slowing rescue work. A
car carrying 17 Chinese soldiers to the quake epicenter fell into a river,
killing two of the soldiers. Some rescue teams report having to dynamite
boulders and hike for several hours to reach affected villages.
Water, electricity and gas supplies remain cut to much of the affected region.
No comments:
Post a Comment
yes