| China Quake Kills Nearly 10,000 In Sichuan Province 
    CHINA: May 13, 2008
 
 
 CHENGDU, China - An earthquake devastated south-western China, killing close 
    to 10,000 people and trapping hundreds of others under schools, factories 
    and houses while the worst-hit area was still cut off from rescuers on 
    Tuesday.
 
 
 The 7.8 magnitude quake, centred in Sichuan province, struck in the middle 
    of the school day on Monday and toppled at least eight schools. 
    Chemical-laden factories and at least one hospital collapsed, trapping 
    hundreds more, state media said.
 
 The death toll appeared likely to climb in China's worst earthquake for over 
    three decades as troops struggled on foot to reach the worst-hit area of 
    Wenchuan, some 100 km (62 miles) from the Sichuan's provincial capital 
    Chengdu.
 
 Officials said there was no word from three townships nearest epicentre in 
    Wenchuan, a hilly county of 112,000 people.
 
 About 900 teenagers were buried under a three-storey school building in the 
    Sichuan city of Dujiangyan. Premier Wen Jiabao, who rushed there, bowed 
    three times in grief before some of the 50 bodies already pulled out, Xinhua 
    news agency reported.
 
 Xinhua said at another Dujiangyan school 420 students were trapped and 
    workers had so far been able to rescue less than 100.
 
 "Not one minute can be wasted," Wen said. "One minute, one second could mean 
    a child's life."
 
 In Chengdu, many residents slept outside or in cars, fearing more tremors in 
    the city where at least 45 people died and 600 were injured.
 
 The government has rushed troops and medical teams to dig for survivors and 
    treat the injured. Sometimes struggling to contain his emotions, Wen vowed 
    to spare no effort while urging crying and injured residents to stay calm.
 
 Severed roads and rail lines blocked the way to Wenchuan, and local 
    officials described crumpled houses, landslides and scenes of desperation.
 
 "We are in urgent need of tents, food, medicine and satellite communications 
    equipment," the Communist Party chief of Wenchuan, Wang Bin said, according 
    to Xinhua.
 
 
 TOWNSHIPS COLLAPSE
 
 Most farmers' homes in two townships had collapsed and there was no word 
    from the three townships nearest the epicentre, which have a population of 
    24,000, the report added. So far Wenchuan has reported 15 dead, a number 
    likely to rise steeply.
 
 More than 7,000 may have died in Sichuan's Beichuan Qiang Autonomous County, 
    where 80 percent of the buildings were destroyed, Sichuan television said. 
    Beichuan has a population of 161,000, meaning about one in 10 there were 
    killed or injured.
 
 "Even if it means walking in, we must enter the worst-hit areas as quickly 
    as possible," Wen said, according to Xinhua.
 
 But a paramilitary officer marching with a hundred troops towards Wenchuan 
    described a devastated landscape that is likely to yield many dead and to 
    frustrate rescuers.
 
 "I have seen many collapsed civilian houses and the rocks dropped from 
    mountains on the roadside are everywhere," said the People's Armed Police 
    officer Liu Zaiyuan, according to Xinhua.
 
 Thunderstorms forecast in Sichuan for Tuesday could make rescue attempts 
    more difficult and dislodge more loose rocks.
 
 Most phone lines in Wenchuan were down and a website for the region's Aba 
    prefecture said the quake had cut several major highways and communications 
    were largely severed in 11 counties.
 
 Landslides had cut off three major rail lines leading to Chengdu, stranding 
    31 passenger trains and 149 cargo trains, Xinhua said, but no casualties had 
    been reported.
 
 The US Geological Survey said the main quake struck at 0628 GMT at a depth 
    of 10 km (6 miles).
 
 Its force was felt across much of China and caused buildings to sway in 
    Beijing and Shanghai and as far away as the Thai capital Bangkok.
 
 
 SHOCK TO REGION
 
 The quake was another shock to the region already trying to cope with the 
    devastation of a cyclone this month in Burma.
 
 Some 1.5 million people in Burma are facing hunger and disease after the 
    cyclone ravaged the Irrawaddy delta, leaving an official toll of 31,938 dead 
    and 29,770 missing.
 
 The Sichuan quake was the worst to hit China since the 1976 Tangshan tremor 
    in north-eastern China where up to 300,000 died.
 
 This time the devastation was worst in hilly farming country, where winding 
    roads can be hard travel even in normal times. The area is near the famed 
    Wolong panda reserve.
 
 The disaster has come at a bad time for China, which holds the Olympic Games 
    in August, and has been struggling to keep a lid on unrest in ethnic Tibetan 
    areas.
 
 Tong Chongde, a spokesman for the massive Three Gorges Dam Project near 
    Sichuan, said there was no damage to the structure.
 
 In Shefang city in Sichuan, 6,000 residents were evacuated after two 
    chemical plants were levelled, trapping more than a hundred people and 
    spilling corrosive liquids.
 
 In Beijing and Shanghai, office workers poured into the streets. In the 
    capital, there was no visible damage and the showpiece Bird's Nest Olympic 
    stadium was unscathed.
 
 Chinese officials and scientists said that Beijing was unlikely to see more 
    aftershocks, Xinhua reported.
 
 In Washington, President George W. Bush said the United States was ready to 
    help. The UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon as well as Japan, France, Germany 
    and other powers have also sent messages offering condolences and help.
 
 But for now China is struggling to get its own rescuers where they are most 
    needed, and one international aid expert said the death toll was likely to 
    rise.
 
 "Our biggest concern is children who were in schools and orphanages when the 
    earthquake hit," said Wyndham James, the China country director for the Save 
    the Children charity.
 
 "I can imagine the authorities are releasing only conservative [death toll] 
    figures that are likely to grow."
 
 Some 61 people have been confirmed killed in northern Shaanxi, 48 in 
    northwestern Gansu, 50 in Chongqing municipality, and one in Yunnan 
    province, Xinhua said, citing the national headquarters of disaster relief.
 
 (Writing by Chris Buckley; Additional reporting by Beijing and Shanghai 
    bureaux; Editing by Stephen Weeks)
 
 
 Story by Ben Blanchard
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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