martes, 13 de mayo de 2008
Quake in China
Quake in China Kills Thousands7.9-Magnitude Temblor, Centered in Sichuan, Is Country's Worst in Decades
By Jill DrewWashington Post Foreign ServiceTuesday, May 13, 2008; A01
BEIJING, May 13 -- A powerful earthquake hit central China on Monday, killing nearly 10,000 people, as schools and other buildings collapsed across eight provinces and tremors shook buildings as far away as Bangkok.
State media reported widespread damage, and officials feared that the death toll could rise sharply as rescue teams reached areas affected by the massive quake, the worst to strike the country in three decades.
Most of the damage appeared to be in Sichuan province, where as many as 5,000 people died and 10,000 were injured in one county alone, state media reported. The collapse of one high school left 1,000 students and teachers dead or missing, while further south, as many as 900 students were trapped beneath the rubble of another town's devastated high school.
"People were terrified," said Huang Shi Hua, who had just watched rescuers loading victims into ambulances near the city of Chongqing, where a primary school had collapsed, killing four children.
The 7.9-magnitude earthquake struck at 2:28 p.m. and was centered 55 miles northwest of Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province, according to China's State Seismological Bureau. More than 1,000 aftershocks jolted the region, state media reported, and the quake was felt nearly 1,000 miles away in Beijing, where workers poured into the streets as office towers swayed.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao arrived in Chengdu just a few hours after the quake hit to oversee rescue efforts and establish a temporary headquarters for disaster relief. An estimated 50,000 soldiers, police and reservists were dispatched to the area to provide aid as Chinese President Hu Jintao called for "all-out" efforts to rescue quake victims. The deployment of the military, in particular, sent a signal of urgency in a country that carefully calibrates the use of its armed forces.
Rescuers, meanwhile, worked through the night to locate victims and provide medical care.
Li Jing, general engineer of China's National Disaster Reduction Center, said the full scale of the devastation is unclear because communication and transportation links to mountainous Sichuan province were badly damaged. He said rescuers will place a priority on getting water and medicine to the affected regions as quickly as possible to minimize the loss of life.
Cellphone communication in the area failed after 2,300 base stations and five power plants shut down, officials said. Chengdu airport closed and flights throughout the country were disrupted.
Telephone calls could not be connected to emergency officials in Wenchuan county, the sparsely populated area at the quake's center. Wenchuan, home to China's leading giant panda reserve, is to the south of Beichuan county, where up to 80 percent of the buildings collapsed.
A rescue team set out for Wenchuan on foot at 10 p.m. Monday, walked through the night and had about 45 miles to go at about 6:30 a.m. Tuesday. Local officials, via satellite phone, appealed for urgent help.
Li Chongxi, a high-level Communist Party official in Sichuan, attempted to lead a rescue team to Wenchuan but could not get through. "We are doing everything we can, but the roads are blanketed with rocks and boulders," he was quoted as telling the New China News Agency.
The massive Three Gorges Dam, a few hundred miles away, was not affected by the quake, state media quoted an official as saying. Two chemical plants in Shifang city were reportedly flattened, burying hundreds of workers and spilling more than 80 tons of toxic liquid ammonia.
A Chengdu resident said the ground shook for several minutes and tall buildings swayed in the city of 10.7 million people. He saw one building shift position and begin leaning after the quake ended, but he said it had not fallen.
Chen Liangcai, in Sichuan's Deyang city, said the quake felt like "sitting on a train going through a hard turn." State media reported that five schools collapsed in the city, trapping an unknown number of students. Chen said local officials advised residents not to go inside their homes to sleep, but to spend the night outside.
Experts said many of the buildings were not built to withstand the impact of such a severe earthquake. In the four hours after the main quake, many other, smaller quakes were recorded by the U.S. Geological Survey. Experts said aftershocks could be just as deadly as the main quake because they put new strains on already damaged structures.
One Deyang shopkeeper, who declined to give her name, said she was advised to stay in her shop and not return home for the night. Rattled after having watched dozens of ambulances race by all afternoon, she said she would do as she was told. But she devised her own early warning system by putting a piece of metal in a glass; if she noticed it trembling, she said, she would run from the shop.
A reporter for National Public Radio who was in Chengdu at the time of the quake reported that tens of thousands of people had rushed into the streets, fearing that buildings would collapse. Many people remained in the streets for several hours, she said; stores closed and did not reopen.
Tang Yi, an office clerk in Chengdu, said local government vehicles were patrolling the streets about midnight, broadcasting from loudspeakers that residents should not panic. Tang said most of the people in his neighborhood were spending the night camped out in a local square. He saw some buildings with large cracks and others whose ceramic tiles had fallen off.
In Beijing, Olympic organizers said none of the venues built for the Games, which open Aug. 8, were damaged. Li Jiulin, a top engineer on the 91,000-seat National Stadium, known as the Bird's Nest, 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, according to Reuters.
In Xian, panicked residents across the city filled the streets as buildings shook. Strong aftershocks continued for more than an hour as stores, shopping malls and restaurants across the city shuttered. Many of the city's 13 million residents fled for the countryside, according to residents.
Zhang Guomin, a researcher at China's Seismological Bureau, said the damage was so great because the quake was shallow, about six miles below the earth's surface. Earthquakes less than 19 miles below the ground release 85 percent of their energy to the surface, Zhang said in an interview with the New China News Agency.
Researchers Liu Liu and Liu Songjie contributed to this report.
© 2008 The Washington Post Company
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