| May 15, 2008 Death toll in China soars to over 19,500
|
LUOSHUI TOWN, China (AP) - China issued a rare public appeal
Thursday for rescue equipment as the government struggled to cope
with this week's deadly earthquake. Rescue workers broke through
key roads to the epicenter in the race to find survivors, as the
death toll soared to more than 19,500.
More than 72 hours after the quake rattled central China,
rescuers appeared to shift from poring through downed buildings for
survivors to the grim duty of searching for bodies - with 10
million directly affected by Monday's temblor.
As their operations continued, the official death toll rose
above 19,500 in Sichuan province alone where Monday's quake was
centered, the regional government said Thursday, according to the
official Xinhua News Agency. The figure was up from nearly 15,000
on Wednesday.
With some roads cleared, rescue workers were able to move heavy
equipment into the worst-affected areas for the first time.
Previously, soldiers riding to isolated mountain villages on
helicopters and small boats had been forced to dig for survivors
with their hands.
In Luoshui town - on the road to an industrial zone in Shifang
city where two chemical plants collapsed, burying hundreds of
people - troops used a mechanical shovel to dig a pit on a hilltop
to bury the dead. Two bodies wrapped in white sheets lie near the
pit.
Police and militia in Dujiangyan pulverized rubble with cranes
and backhoes while crews used shovels to pick around larger pieces
of
debris. On one sidestreet, about a dozen bodies were laid on a
sidewalk, while incense sticks placed in a pile of sand sent smoke
into the air as a tribute and to dull the stench of death.
The bodies were later lifted onto a flatbed truck, joining some
half-dozen corpses. Ambulances sped past, sirens wailing, filled
with survivors. Workers asked those left homeless to sign up for
temporary housing, although it was unclear where they would live.
Plans for the Defense Ministry to deploy 101 more helicopters
underscored worries that the death toll would continue to skyrocket
as time runs out to find survivors. Nearly 26,000 people remained
buried in collapsed buildings.
Not all hope of finding survivors was lost. After more than
three days trapped under debris, a 22-year-old woman was pulled to
safety in Dujiangyan. Covered in dust and peering out through a
small opening, she was shown waving on state television shortly
before being rescued.
"I was confident that you were coming to rescue me. I'm alive.
I'm so happy," the unnamed woman said on CCTV.
One earthquake expert said the time for rescues was growing
short.
"Within 72 hours after the disaster is the critical period.
Generally, the sooner the rescue of the buried, the better," the
chief engineer of Shijiazhuang Bureau of Seismology, Liang Guiping,
told state TV.
The government issued a rare appeal to the Chinese public
calling for donations of rescue equipment including hammers,
shovels, demolition tools and rubber boats. The plea on the
Ministry of Information Industry's Web Site said, for example, that
100 cranes were needed.
The public request is emblematic of China's relative openness in
dealing with the tragedy, as compared to past crises.
"This is only a beginning of this battle, and a long way lies
ahead of us," Vice Health Minister Gao Qiang told reporters in
Beijing.
No outbreaks of disease had struck refugees, who were being
immunized against some illnesses, Gao said. Workers were seeking to
ensure safety of drinking water and removing corpses to prevent the
spread of bacteria.
After days of refusing foreign relief workers, China accepted an
offer from Japan to send a rescue team, Foreign Ministry spokesman
Qin Gang said in an announcement posted on the ministry Web site.
Tawan's Red Cross said rival China also agreed to accept a
20-person emergency relief team from the island.
Taiwan is also sending a cargo plane to Chengdu with tents and
medical supplies. The Air Macau plane will make a brief stop in
Macau.
Taiwan and China, which split during civil war in 1949, have
banned regular direct links and other formal contacts as political
disputes persist.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies also issued an emergency appeal for medical help, food,
water and tents.
Gu Qinghui, the federation's disaster management director for
East Asia who visited Beichuan county near the epicenter, said more
than 4 million homes were shattered across the quake area.
"The whole county has been destroyed. Basically there is no
Beichuan county anymore," Gu said in Beijing, adding the death
toll was sure to rise.
Forty-four counties and districts in Sichuan were severely hit,
with about half of the 20 million people living there directly
affected, Xinhua said.
Roads were cleared to two key areas that bore the brunt of the
quake's force, with workers making it to the border of Wenchuan
county at the epicenter and also through to hard-hit Beichuan
county, Xinhua reported. Communication cables were also reconnected
to Wenchuan.
The Chengdu Military Area Command also planned to airdrop 50,000
packets of food, 5,000 cotton-padded quilts and clothes there, part
of the military rescue operation that has grown to include more
than 116,000 soldiers and police.
Dujiangyan city was clogged with buses and trucks decked out
with banners from companies saying they were offering aid to
disaster victims. One tour bus was stuffed full of water bottles,
cartons of biscuits and instant noodles.
Public donations so far have totaled $125 million in both cash
and goods.
NBA star Yao Ming, China's most famous athlete, was planning to
donate $285,000 to the relief effort, agent Erik Zhang said.
"My thoughts are with everyone back in my home country of China
during this very dark and emotional time," Yao said in a statement
from Houston, where he is recovering from a broken left foot with
hopes of competing in the Beijing Olympics this August.
As the rescue effort gathered momentum, the depth of the problem
of tens of thousands homeless stretched government resources.
North of Chengdu in Deyang, the largest town near the devastated
areas of Hanwang and Mianyang, thousands of people have streamed
into the city hospital since Monday, mostly with head or bone
injuries.
Patients heavily wrapped in bandages and with cuts and bruises
were huddled in canvas tents in the hospital's parking lot.
"Our doctors have worked continuously since Monday and people
keep coming in. We have to keep strengthening our measures to keep
up," said Luo Mingxuan, the Communist Party secretary of the
hospital.
There were piles of donated clothing for survivors at the
hospital and stands for them to make free telephone calls.
Handwritten notes with names of the injured were posted on a board
in front of the hospital's emergency section, where ambulances
arrived every few minutes.
A group of 33 American, British and French tourists were
airlifted from Wolong, site of the world's most famous panda
preserve, to the provincial capital of Chengdu on Thursday morning,
Xinhua reported. All were in good health, Xinhua said.
---
Associated Press writers Audra Ang in Mianyang, Christopher
Bodeen in Dujiangyan, and Cara Anna and Anita Chang in Beijing
contributed to this report.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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