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Earthquake in China: "They were trapped in the rubble, crying out for help"



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Published Date: 13 May 2008
'HANG on a bit longer. The troops are rescuing you." That is what the Chinese premier, Wen Jiabao, shouted to people buried under a hospital in Dujiangyan city, as the country's second most powerful man took to the streets to reassure his stricken people that help was on the way.
As the full extent of yesterday's huge earthquake dawned on the authorities, Mr Wen was dispatched from Beijing to the disaster zone around the city of Chengdu to let them know that the state was coming.

Outside another collapsed building, a school in Juyuan, he urged front-line workers to multiply their efforts "by 100, as long as there was a slightest hope" of rescuing its 900 pupils.

Xinhua, the state news agency, said: "Some buried teenagers were struggling to break loose from underneath the ruins, while others were crying out for help."

Later, after visiting the disaster relief headquarters an as the death toll rose to nearly 10,000, he admitted: "The situation is worse than we previously estimated and we need more people here to help."

Villagers used their bare hands to wrestle with rubble as cranes picked through the remains of the three-storey building and ambulances waited for casualties. A tearful mother said her son was buried in the ruins, while two girls said they had escaped because they had "run faster than others". Late last night around 50 bodies had been recovered from the rubble.

Gao Shangyuan, who lives close to the school and helped the rescue work, said: "Some had jumped out of the window and a few others ran down the stairs that did not collapse."



Juyuan is some 60 miles from the epicentre of the earthquake that devastated the Sichuan province of China. The quake hit a region of small cities and towns set amid steep hills north-east of Sichuan's provincial capital, Chengdu, at 2:30pm local time yesterday and lasted about three minutes.

It struck at the worst time of day – most people were in offices, schools and factories.

State media said some 80 per cent of the buildings in one county of Sichuan have collapsed, including a hospital.

And hundreds of people were buried in two collapsed chemical plants,it was reported. Xinhua said about 6,000 people were evacuated and more than 80 tonnes of liquid ammonia had leaked.

Shockwaves from the 7.9-magnitude quake rattled buildings in Beijing, 930 miles to the north-east, causing offices to be evacuated.

People ran screaming into the streets in other cities, where many residents said they had never felt an earthquake before. Tremors were also experienced in Vietnam, Thailand and Pakistan, up to 2,000 miles away. There were no fewer than 313 aftershocks.

Seismologists said the quake was so widespread because it happened so deep undergound – six miles down.

As many as 10,000 people were injured and hundreds of children remained trapped in at least eight collapsed schools.

More than 20,000 soldiers and police were rushed into Sichuan to help in the disaster relief.

More than 150 people were killed in the other provinces of Gansu and Shaanxi, and in Chongqing municipality, Xinhua said. And the death toll is likely to rise once the damage in Wenchuan county - the epicentre - is assessed.

Landslides had left some roads impassable, with the government ordering soldiers into the area on foot, while heavy rain prevented military helicopters from landing.

"We are doing everything we can, but the roads are blanketed with rocks and boulders," said Li Chongxi, Sichuan's deputy Communist party chief.

A driver for Sichuan's seismological bureau told reporters: "The road started swaying as I was driving. Rocks fell from the mountains, with dust darkening the sky over the valley."

Nervous Chengdu residents spent the night outside or headed to the suburbs. Ronen Medzini, an Israeli student in the city, said in a text message to friends: "Traffic jams, no running water, power-outs, everyone sitting in the streets, patients evacuated from hospitals sitting outside."

Meanwhile, Huang Ju, 52, who took her ailing, elderly mother out of the Jinjiang District People's Hospital, said: "We can't get to sleep. We're afraid of the earthquake. We're afraid of all the shaking."

Outside the hospital, she sat in a wheelchair wrapped in blankets as her mother slept in a hospital bed next to her.

State television bizarrely broadcast tips for anyone trapped: "If you're buried, keep calm and conserve your energy. Seek water and food and wait patiently for rescue."

Dale Rutstein, of the charity Unicef China, said: "I would expect the death toll to rise, as Sichuan is one of the most populated provinces and one of the poorest.

"There are a lot of people living in marginal areas that are difficult to get to, and a lot of the buildings in those areas are substandard and could collapse very quickly."

In Beijing, where hundreds of thousands of foreign visitors are expected for the Olympics, which start on 8 August, venues for the Games were said to be undamaged.

Li Jiulin, a senior engineer on the 91,000-seat National Stadium – known as the Bird's Nest and the jewel of the Olympics – was conducting an inspection at the venue when the quake occurred. He told reporters the building was designed to withstand an 8.0-magnitude quake.

Xinhua also said there was no immediate impact on the Three Gorges Dam project. The weight of its massive reservoir, which is a few hundred kilometres from Chengdu, could increase the risk of tremors, according to experts.

The quake was one of the worst in three decades and posed a challenge to a government already grappling with discontent over high inflation and a widespread uprising among Tibetans in western China.

The epicentre was in the mountains of the eastern rim of Qing-Tibet Plateau at the north-west side of the Sichuan Basin. It occurred as a result of motion on a fault that runs along the margin of the basin.

The quake appeared to be the deadliest since the most devastating in modern history, which killed 240,000 people in the city of Tangshan, near Beijing, in 1976.

The full article contains 1039 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 13 May 2008 1:50 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

,

13/05/2008 00:02:07
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

,

13/05/2008 00:18:41
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

postmark54,

Chongqing, China, 13/05/2008 03:10:08
#3 Encarta,
Could you possibly get any more ignorant when making a statement like that?
How on earth do you possibly think we created this earthquake?
Grab a brain and a life while you're at it.
Thanks for all the concern for all the innocent people that are suffering due to a natural disaster.
I guess that we in China are responsible for all of the world's natural disasters eh?
4

Lachlyn,

Kunming 13/05/2008 03:16:56
The people dying and trapped are not government officals or Olympic organisers - they are men, women and children from small cities and the countryside.

The Chinese government are already doing a better job than the US did with their natural disaster. People are being found and rescued, but the death toll will always be large in flection of the massive population.

Lets hope they can work fast enough to save the trapped school children.

5

Rabhairt,

Cannons Creek Australia 13/05/2008 08:18:11
#3 please go back to the planet you came from, you would not have a clue you galah.
#4/5 well said both of you, here we have a leader on the scene of the disaster giving hope to the victims, maybe the "Generals" in Burma can take a leaf out of his book, good on you Premier Wen Jiabao.
6

Lillig,

13/05/2008 08:53:35
No 3 - Encarta. Go back to the rock you crawled out from.

Please do enlighten us about what previous "price" was "paid" etc etc?

You seem to suggest that people/nations are governed by "the fates" and good is rewarded whilst evil is not. You obviously don't know very much. Where is the evidence? There is no big controller meting out just rewards.

Now if that were the case, you would be immediately blasted out of your cozy location and subjected to something truly disgusting - if this has already happened, please do let us know, so that we can take avertive action.

Meanwhile, the poor people of China have suffered an enormous earthquake, the magnitude of which cannot be imagined. Even a 5 on the richter scale lasting for 30 seconds is pretty frightening.

It is right that Premier Wen Jiabao is there. At this time, people need to see a high ranking politician, to know that they have not been forgotten. The rescue task is formidable.

My thoughts are with the Chinese.

7

Biker,

Ayr 13/05/2008 08:58:03
A natural disaster of this magnatude is hard for any single country to deal with, and your comments #3 are unhelpfull to anyone. I hope China accepts help more gracefully than Burma.
Condollences to those who have lost family or friends.
8

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 13/05/2008 09:14:14
Could #3, be referring to China's extremely large past nuclear tests,?
9

Biker,

Ayr 13/05/2008 09:36:09
Dont think so, but I have an open mind Charles.
10

Lillig,

13/05/2008 09:46:28
Who knows Charles and Biker - but its an awful thing to suggest that its a payback.
11

Anglofile,

13/05/2008 10:00:26
When the dust clears and everyone settles down, China will blame the Dalai Lama for wreaking vengeance on the chinese people. Or like Burma, the almighty is having a clear out.

At least the Chinese work quicker than the Burmese in taking to rescuing their injured.
12

Horrible Cankers at the Cyber Shebeen,

13/05/2008 10:05:18
I am grateful that I live in a country that does not have any of these natural disasters...all of the many others suffer terribly, with earthquakes, tsunamis, terrible droughts or floods, it is always the poorer people who suffer the worst...
13

scotia,

Caribbean 13/05/2008 10:34:11
#3 what an ignorant thing to say and #12 you are not much better. This was not the fault of any government or individual. These poor people did nothing to deserve this act of nature.
The government has reacted swiftly, and as #5 pointed out, fast than the US, look at New Orleans.
I don't claim to understand the workings of the universe, but I am wondering what is going on. With all the deaths in Burma and now China and closer to where I live where an illegal immigrant boat sank and more recent a ferry boat capsized, what is going on?

It is so sad.
14

Drum Major,

Brisbane, Australia 13/05/2008 10:34:31
It is good to see the Chinese Army involved in this rescue work. Prompt response to such disasters shows the current leadership does care about its people. China tell the military leaders of Myanmar "This is how it is done, if you can't do it then stand aside and let those who can to come in and provide timely aid to a suffering people". Our thoughts are with the Chinese and Burmese peoples.
15

techpunk,

13/05/2008 11:47:23
come on #3.

pipe up!

lets hear your logic.

(this should be a laugh).
16

,

13/05/2008 13:00:53
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
17

Friend-at-large,

USA 13/05/2008 13:55:49
The Chinese are demonstrating swift and effective leadership in a crisis. This can only add to their stature. I respect them for their prompt actions and real concern.

Condolences to all who have lost a loved one so suddenly. It's especially sad for the parents because Chinese families are now small.
18

postmark54,

Chongqing, China 13/05/2008 14:17:56
#17 TimW1234,
I thought that there wasn't a lower life form than #3 Encarta, until I came across your most disgusting and deplorable statement. You actually show your face in public without hanging your head in shame? Are your family and friends aware as to what a monster you are? Can you be for real making that sickest of statements regarding ten thousand Chinese? By now the death toll is much higher than that, so you must surely be dancing in the streets of Ottawa. I will never wish this on anybody in any country, we are All human beings, and yes, that includes you. I definitely wish you no harm, even after that most horrific statement you made, but anybody like you must suffer all of the time going through life with so much hatred. I sincerely hope that you can redeem your ways and become a better person.
19

Richard Lionheart,

13/05/2008 16:11:22
I am sure the Chinse army will do a sterling job.

Back in the UK what are Labour trying to bury this week with all this headline grabbing news about?

Does Wendy escape?
20

Biker,

Ayr 13/05/2008 18:03:10
Who deleted Tim's comment then?
21

ricstick2000,

florida usa 13/05/2008 19:57:46
A terrible disaster the chinese people do not need any more suffering they need our HELP and Our Condolences,shame on number 3 for your outrageous comment.
22

marcel,

Algeria 14/05/2008 01:05:59
I am a chinese engineer in Africa,who shocked by some of your words.
It's a payback?? I see this word in many english bbs,I don't think i can take it as some western jokes.
In china,many workers work over 50 hours per week,for about 20$ to feed their family,and so you can buy many cheap things in your supermarket.I can't understand some of you just like #1#2#3,do we do harm to you?What makes you hate China so much?Because you hate the Chinese Communist Party?
Let me tell you something,I don't like CCP too,but I don't think some other one can make chinese people live much more better.CCP does nothing about communist now,only left a name,we live much better than ago,and it will be better and better.
So,chines really puzzling about what you have done in Paris to the Olympic fire,what's you really want we to do?Get angry,overthrow CCP,vote a man like Hitler to have a World War ??-----It's a joke.

To #12,who always Tibet this Tibet that,have you been in Tibet?Have you read the history of Tibet?Do you know rulers like your hero Dalai Lama kept many Tibetans as slaves before he escaped?If not,welcome to China to have a look,before you come,please shut up.

To #9,China had stopped nuclear tests for many years,and China did nuclear tests in some big deserts far away form SiCHUAN.
23

marcel,

Algeria 14/05/2008 01:23:27
http://i32.tinypic.com/14agz92.jpg
24

Fouckler Clins,

Washington 14/05/2008 08:04:43
To #3, disaster is sad, like earthquake at Forth Rail Bridge, people being crushed by steelwork coming adrift and on the bridge. gueess that was an earthquake. could be wrong. by comparing, lets help each other in needs.
25

weary observer,

Wisconsin USA 14/05/2008 14:59:47
This is indeed a terrible disaster and not a time to waste words and energy pointing fingers, but to help persons suffering terribly. Imagine yourself standing outside a school demolished and your own child buried within. Is the child alive, will it get out alive, or will it remain trapped while it slowly dies of suffocation. Most of us will never experience that, thank God.

Marcel, maybe many want these cheap products, but I do NOT want 'cheaper good' produced by near slave labor in your or any other country. I want the same wonderful, well-made American reliable, and decently priced products we had all the years I was growing up. But I didn't and don't control these things.

 

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