China steps up earthquake rescue efforts; 80 dead
Topics: From the Wires, News
(120908) -- YILIANG, Sept. 8, 2012 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao talks to earthquake victims in Yiliang County of Zhaotong, southwest China's Yunnan Province, Sept. 8, 2012. Premier Wen Jiabao arrived in Yiliang County early Saturday to inspect the quake-stricken areas and direct rescue operations. (Xinhua/Huang Jingwen)(Credit: Huang Jingwen)BEIJING (AP) — Rescue workers cleared roads Saturday so they could search for survivors and rush aid to a remote mountainous area of southwestern China after twin earthquakes killed at least 80 people.
More than 200,000 villagers were evacuated after Friday’s quakes toppled thousands of homes and sent boulders cascading across roads in a region of small farms and mines near the border between Guizhou and Yunnan provinces, where some of China’s poorest people live.
The official Xinhua News Agency quoted local officials as saying the death toll could climb further because the quakes seriously damaged roads and communications, making it difficult to collect information.
The damage also slowed rescue efforts.
“Roads are blocked and rescuers have to climb mountains to reach hard-hit villages,” Xinhua quoted Li Fuchun, head of Luozehe township in hardest-hit Yiliang County, as saying.
State television said Saturday that workers had succeeded in clearing a road into the worst-hit area that had been blocked by fallen boulders, allowing rescuers and assistance in.
Rescue work was also likely to be hampered by rain forecast over the next three days. There was, however, some uplifting news: State television reported that four babies had been born in temporary hospitals set up after the quakes.
The first magnitude-5.6 quake struck just before 11:30 a.m. Friday and was followed by an equally strong quake shortly after noon, joined by dozens of aftershocks. Though of moderate strength, the quakes were shallow, which often causes more damage than deeper ones.
Zhang Junwei, a spokesman for the Yunnan Seismological Bureau, said by telephone Saturday that 80 people had died and 821 others had been injured.
All but one of the deaths occurred in Yiliang County, according to the Yunnan provincial government’s official website. Yiliang’s high population density — twice the provincial average — along with flimsy building construction and landslide-prone hillsides were blamed for the relatively high death toll.
The dead included three primary school students, Xinhua said. It cited Zhou Guangfu, deputy chief of the Yiliang county education bureau, as saying 15 students were in their classroom in Jiaokui township when the first quake hit. Eight were buried in rubble and teachers and villagers were able to rescue five of them, he said.
CCTV footage showed heavy equipment being used to clear roads littered with rocks and boulders.




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