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Strong 6.9 quake hits Qinghai

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Apr 14, 2010

Strong 6.9 quake hits Qinghai

BEIJING - A STRONG 6.9-magnitude earthquake hit northwest China's remote Qinghai province early on Wednesday, the US Geological Survey said. The quake, which hit at 7.49am (2349 GMT on Tuesday), was centred 380 kilometres (240 miles) south-southeast of the city of Golmud at a depth of 46 kilometres, USGS said. The remote high-altitude region which borders northern Tibet is sparsely populated. -- AFP



 

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</td> </tr> </tbody></table> XINING, Aug. 28 (Xinhua) -- An earthquake measuring 6.4 on the Richter scale struck remote Qinghai Province in northwest China at 9:52 a.m. Friday, the China Earthquake Administration said, but no casualties have been reported. A total of 128 aftershocks had been registered by 11 a.m. near the epicenter in the Da Qaidam (also known as Dachaidan) district in the Mongolian-Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Haixi, with the strongest measuring 5.3 magnitudes that struck at 10:14, according to the Qinghai Provincial Seismological Network.

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Photo taken on Aug. 28, 2009 shows dust raised by the aftershocks at the mountain area in the Da Qaidam (also known as Dachaidan) district in the Mongolian-Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Haixi, northwest China's Qinghai Province. An earthquake measuring 6.4 on the Richter scale struck remote Qinghai Province in northwest China at 9:52 a.m. Friday, the China Earthquake Administration said, but no casualties have been reported since all the miners of the coal mine near the epicenter were on the ground at the time of the earthquake. (Xinhua/Wen Yiwei)

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"Frequent aftershocks can still be felt here, but we have not received any reports of casualties," Li Daqing, deputy director of the Haixi Seismological Bureau, told Xinhua at about 3 p.m. at the Da Qaidam Township where the Da Qaidam District Administrative Committee seats. "The township is safe and sound, except for cracks in the walls of some old houses," he said. A coalmine in a mountain near the epicenter and about 30 old houses in its compound collapsed during the quake.

Landslides triggered by the quake and aftershocks had blocked roads in the mine Friday afternoon. Fortunately all the miners were on the ground at the time of the earthquake. Local authorities were sending tents to provide shelter for the miners. The tents would arrive Friday evening, according to a mine manager. The epicenter, at 37.6 degrees north and 95.8 east, was about 140 km away from Delingha City, the capital of the Haixi prefecture, and about 160 km away from Golmud, another major city in Haixi, according to the China Earthquake Administration.




 

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Photo taken on Aug. 28, 2009 shows a crack in the wall of an office building at the Kaiyuan coal mine in the Da Qaidam (also known as Dachaidan) district in the Mongolian-Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Haixi, northwest China's Qinghai Province. (Xinhua Photo)

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The quake was strongly felt in both cities, the administration said. The local government, the China Earthquake Administration, the National Disaster Reduction Committee and the Ministry of Civil Affairs have all sent staff to the quake-hit region to investigate and direct relief work. Da Qaidam is a sparsely populated district with an average altitude of 4,000 meters and about 16,000 people, including Mongolians, Tibetans, Muslim Hui and Han. The district covers 34,000 square km and administers three townships. The population of farmers and herdsmen is less than 1,000 and they all live in the three towns.

Da Qaidam, which literally means "a big salt lake" in Mongolian, is rich in mineral resources, with one of the largest lead-zinc mines in western China and several coalmines. On Nov. 10 last year, a 6.3-magnitude quake struck Da Qaidam, in which three people were injured, more than 11,000 were forced to be evacuated and more than 10,000 houses collapsed or were seriously damaged. In April 2003, a 6.6-magnitude quake hit the same region but did not cause casualties, either, and only damaged old buildings.



 

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Photo taken on Aug. 28, 2009 shows the damaged houses at the Kaiyuan coal mine in the Da Qaidam (also known as Dachaidan) district in the Mongolian-Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Haixi, northwest China's Qinghai Province.(Xinhua Photo)



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A bulldozer cleans up the road blocked by landslides triggered by the quake and aftershocks in the Da Qaidam (also known as Dachaidan) district in the Mongolian-Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Haixi, northwest China's Qinghai Province, on Aug. 28, 2009. (Xinhua Photo)






 

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About 400 dead, 10,000 hurt in China quake


About 400 dead, 10,000 hurt in China quake

Posted: 14 April 2010 1119 hrs



BEIJING: A strong earthquake hit a remote mountainous area of China Wednesday, killing about 400 people and injuring thousands as it toppled m&d-and-wood houses and at least one school, burying many in rubble.

About 10,000 people were injured in the quake of at least 6.9-magnitude which also disrupted telecommunications, knocked out electricity and triggered landslides in the northwestern province of Qinghai, local officials said. Rescuers were working with their bare hands to clear debris and find survivors from the rubble, with children said to be among the casualties. About 400 people have been confirmed dead, Xinhua news agency reported, quoting Huang Limin, a top official in the Yushu prefecture where the quake was centred.

"The injured are everywhere in the street, a lot of people are bleeding from head wounds," Xinhua quoted another local official, identified as Zhuohuaxia, as saying from the town of Jiegu. The quake wreaked havoc on the flimsy earth and wood houses near the epicentre - a high-altitude area near the border with Tibet and at least 12 hours by road from the provincial capital.

But some sturdier concrete structures also were toppled, according to images broadcast by state television. Among the casualties were children trapped under the rubble of at least one collapsed school in the town, seat of the Yushu government and near the quake's epicentre, with Xinhua reporting at least five students had died.

"There are about 20 children buried in the debris," Kang Zifu, a local fire department official, was quoted as telling state television. "We're hurrying to help them... We're also working on the Jiegu commerce and industry department office, where there are about 40 to 50 people buried. They are alive, and we've had contact with them." It was not immediately clear how many schools had collapsed.

Kang said at least 32 people had been pulled alive from debris in Jiegu. Rescue teams and equipment were being rushed to the region, Xinhua said, but noted they could be hampered by the infrastructure damage, which included roads blocked by landslides. Zhuohuaxia said more than 85 per cent of houses had collapsed in Jiegu.

"There is a big crack in the Yushu Hotel and the four-storey meeting hall of the prefecture government has collapsed," he said. About 700 soldiers have been sent to look for survivors, and more than 5,000 other rescuers will be dispatched to the zone, officials in Qinghai said, according to Xinhua. The civil affairs ministry was to send 5,000 tents, 50,000 cotton coats and 50,000 quilts to the region, the agency reported.

"We have to mainly rely on our hands to clear away the debris as we have no large excavating machines," said Shi Huajie, a paramilitary police officer working on the rescue operation. "We have no medical equipment either."
The US Geological Survey put the quake at a magnitude of 6.9 while the China Earthquake Administration measured it at 7.1, saying the extensive damage included cracks in a dam.

The USGS said the quake hit at 7:49 am (2349 GMT Tuesday) and was centred 380 kilometres (240 miles) south-southeast of the city of Golmud, at a depth of 46 kilometres. A series of aftershocks later rattled the area, with magnitudes of up to 5.8, the USGS reported. The quake was also felt strongly in neighbouring regions, including Tibet, Xinhua said. Further aftershocks were likely in the coming days, seismologists said.

The remote high-altitude region is prone to earthquakes. Its economy is based heavily on farming and livestock herding by its overwhelmingly ethnic Tibetan population. A massive 8.0-magnitude quake in May 2008 in neighbouring Sichuan province devastated a huge area of southwestern China, leaving at least 87,000 people dead or missing.

Repeated calls by AFP to local government headquarters, businesses and the local airport in Yushu county went unanswered. "The houses here are almost all made of wood and earthen walls. Some collapsed when the quake happened," Karsum Nyima, deputy director of the news department of Yushu TV, was quoted saying by Xinhua.

- AFP/yb




 

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Chinese military search through the rubble of collapsed buildings following a strong earthquake in northwest China's Qinghai province.



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Locals gather after being evacuated from buildings following an strong earthquake that hit the northwest China's Qinghai province.




 

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Rescue workers search for survivors at the site of a collapsed building in Yushu county in western China's Qinghai province.



 

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Earthquake kills hundreds in remote China region

Posted: 14 April 2010 2350 hrs

XINING, China: Survivors from an earthquake that killed 589 people in a remote area of China on Wednesday faced a cold night without shelter, as rescuers using their bare hands searched for survivors. Thousands were injured when the quake toppled m&d-and-wood houses and school buildings in the northwestern province of Qinghai, but police managed to pull over 900 people alive from ruined buildings over the course of the day.

Many more are believed buried and forecasters predict wind and sleet in coming days, while seismologists warned of further aftershocks, adding to the trauma of victims preparing for a night in the open in the high-altitude zone. Among the dead were children buried when the devastating quake measuring at least 6.9 rocked the predominantly Tibetan region earlier in the day, in scenes that brought back memories of a massive killer quake two years ago.

Exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama offered prayers for those who died while Pope Benedict XVI called for "solidarity" with the victims and nations including Germany, Japan and France voiced shock and offered help. About 10,000 people were injured in the quake, which disrupted telecommunications, knocked out electricity, toppled temples and triggered landslides, hampering rescue efforts in the mountainous area.

State media spoke of panicked residents fleeing their homes while others hunted for loved-ones trapped in the ruins in Yushu prefecture, the epicentre of the latest disaster to strike the world's most populous nation. President Hu Jintao called for all-out efforts to save as many people as possible, with over 5,000 rescuers including soldiers rushing to the disaster zone while the government said it would provide over 29 million dollars in aid.

Xinhua news agency reported that 589 people have been confirmed dead, quoting officials in the local quake relief headquarters, and said many people were still buried in the rubble as aftershocks rumbled on. "There are 10 people in my family and only four of us escaped. One of my relatives died. All the others are buried under the rubble," Samdrup Gyatso, 17, told Xinhua after his two-storey home crumbled.

Zhuohuaxia, an official in Jiegu, seat of the Yushu government, reported a lack of tents, medicines and medical equipment for the survivors. The quake wreaked havoc on the flimsy earth and wood houses near the epicentre, which lies around 800 kilometres or at least 12 hours by road from the provincial capital. "The injured are everywhere in the street, a lot of people are bleeding from head wounds," Xinhua quoted Zhuohuaxia as saying, adding that more than 85 percent of houses collapsed in Jiegu.

Among the dead were at least 56 pupils and five teachers, Xinhua said, quoting local authorities. Another 40 students trapped in the debris have a slim chance of surviving, the agency reported. "Some pupils ran out of dorms alive, and those who had not escaped in time were buried," said one teacher. The scene was reminiscent of the huge quake in May 2008 in Sichuan province, where thousands of children died when their shoddily-constructed schools fell on them - an issue that caused big controversy in China.

Nearly 87,000 people were killed or missing in the 2008 disaster, the worst in China in more than three decades. Rescue teams including 700 soldiers and more than 5,000 other people are being rushed to the disaster zone, Xinhua said, while the civil affairs ministry was to send 5,000 tents, 50,000 coats and 50,000 quilts. The United States on Wednesday was "ready to assist" in the rescue effort, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said, while the UN said its chief Ban Ki-moon "recognises the efforts being undertaken by the government of China to assess the situation and to assist those affected by the earthquake".

French President Nicolas Sarkozy sent a letter to Hu offering condolences and voicing confidence "in China's ability to overcome this latest ordeal". "France is ready to respond to any request for assistance that the Chinese authorities may put forward to come to the aid of affected populations in Qinghai," Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said. State television broadcast images of dogs being led into huge planes going to the scene to help with the search for survivors. "We have to mainly rely on our hands to clear away the debris as we have no large excavating machines," said Shi Huajie, a paramilitary police officer. "We have no medical equipment either." - AFP/yb/de




 

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More than 1,000 dead in China earthquake


More than 1,000 dead in China earthquake

Posted: 17 April 2010 0257 hrs

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A doctor attends to an injured survivor at a makeshift hospital in Yushu county, in northwest Chian's Qinghai province.
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JIEGU, China: The death toll from a strong quake that rocked a remote Tibetan region of China surged past the 1,000 mark on Friday, as tonnes of food, clothes and other vital supplies started pouring in.

Preparations were meanwhile under way for the cremation of hundreds of victims of the disaster as concern turned toward the risk of disease outbreaks in the quake zone, centred on the town of Jiegu in Qinghai province.

An AFP journalist saw hundreds of bodies laid out on the floor of a warehouse-like structure at a Tibetan Buddhist monastery overlooking the town, with locals saying the dead were to be cremated from Saturday. As of Friday evening the official number of dead had risen to 1,144, the state Xinhua news agency said, up from a toll of 791 earlier in the day. Yet it could rise further with more than 400 still missing.

The wail of sirens and stench of death filled the air as relief vehicles thundered through the hard-hit town in Yushu county. Thousands of survivors of Wednesday's 6.9-magnitude earthquake have waited desperately for large-scale shipments of food and other aid, having spent two freezing and hungry nights out in the open after many buildings crumbled. "I have lost everything," a distraught ethnic Tibetan woman who gave her name as Sonaman told AFP.

Wandering the streets with her four-year-old nephew tucked under her coat, Sonaman, 52, said through tears that her mother, father and sister had died. "My house has been destroyed. It's been flattened. My family lost 10 people. We have nothing. We have nothing to eat." Premier Wen Jiabao wrapped up a two-day tour of the disaster area by casting recovery efforts as a chance to foster unity in a region whose Buddhist ethnic Tibetans have a history of chafing at Chinese rule.

"We can overcome the disaster and improve national unity in fighting the calamity," Wen was quoted saying, as state media put the number injured at more than 11,000. The quake flattened thousands of the m&d-and-wood homes inhabited by ethnic Tibetans, who make up more than 90 percent of the northwest region's people, and also heavily damaged sturdier concrete structures such as schools. State media said the dead included 103 students and 12 teachers as schools and dormitories collapsed, with dozens more buried or missing.

The casualties recalled the devastating 2008 earthquake in neighbouring Sichuan province in which thousands of students were among the 87,000 killed or missing amid allegations shoddy construction was to blame. Initial shipments of what will be eventually be 41,000 tents, 160,000 coats and 188,000 quilts began to arrive Friday afternoon, as well as an expected 185 tonnes of food and supplies ranging from cots to mobile toilets, the government said. Newly homeless Jiegu residents expressed fears about disease due to large numbers of human and animal bodies left rotting in the open.

At a briefing in Beijing, government officials said no signs of epidemic had yet been seen but promised stepped-up efforts to head off the threat. "(Authorities) have already started treating human waste and bodies in the disaster-stricken area to prevent any dangerous impact on the local environment," said Chen Xianyi, a health ministry official. Diggers and other heavy equipment were among the machinery entering Jiegu but they remained unequal to the scale of the destruction and locals continued to pick frantically through collapsed buildings.

"There are people in here. We have got to find them. We can't stop until we find them," said a Tibetan Buddhist monk, one of several sorting through a pile of rubble in central Jiegu that reeked of the foul stench of dead bodies. The thousands of rescuers who have poured into the mountainous region were battling temperatures that dipped to five degrees Celsius (41 Fahrenheit) as well as a lack of oxygen in the altitude of nearly 4,000 metres. Thousands of soldiers joined police and other personnel in the effort.

Rescuers suffering altitude sickness pulled a 13-year-old girl and an elderly Tibetan woman with broken legs from the rubble Friday, 57 hours after the quake, Xinhua said. "The first 72 hours offers the best chance of survival after such a calamity strikes," Xi Mei, a medical attendant with the China International Rescue Medical Team, told the agency. President Hu Jintao cut short a Latin American tour and Wen postponed a trip to Southeast Asia to deal with the disaster. - AFP/de




 

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Young quake survivors sit around a stove amid the rubble of their collapsed homes in Jiegu, Yushu County. Stunned survivors of China's earthquake complained of hunger as the government rushed supplies and personnel into the remote disaster zone high on the Tibetan plateau, following the April 14, 6.9 magnitude earthquake that left 760 dead. -- PHOTO: AFP



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People light candles arranged in the shape of a heart, and the numbers '4.14' as they mourn victims of a recent earthquake in Yushu county, at a plaza in Nanjing, in east China's Jiangsu province on April 15, 2010. Meanwhile, stunned survivors of China's earthquake complained of hunger as the government rushed supplies and personnel into the remote disaster zone high on the Tibetan plateau, following the April 14, 6.9 magnitude quake that left 760 dead -- PHOTO: AFP




 

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3 rescued 5 days after quake

Apr 20, 2010
3 rescued 5 days after quake

<!-- by line --> <!-- end by line --> JIEGU (China) - RELATIVES kept alive a 4-year-old girl and an elderly woman trapped by an earthquake under a collapsed house for almost a week in China by using bamboo poles to push water and rice through the rubble until rescuers saved them. The rare good news came as the death toll in China's remote Tibetan region jumped to more than 2,000, with about 200 still missing.

But relief efforts could be hindered as snow began falling on Tuesday on the high-altitude region. Snow and sleet are forecast for the next three days, with temperatures dropping by nearly 20 degrees Fahrenheit (10 degrees Celsius) to far below freezing, according to Tsering Tashi, deputy chief of the Yushu Prefecture Meteorological Bureau, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Rescuers also freed a third person on Monday from the rubble of a hillside house that toppled when the magnitude-6.9 temblor struck Yushu county of Qinghai province on Wednesday morning, state broadcaster China Central Television reported. The death toll from the quake rose to 2,039, while more than 12,100 people were hurt, according to relief officials, Xinhua said. Relief and reconstruction work accelerated, with power and telecommunications services largely restored and aid convoys arriving in droves. -- AP




 

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Satellite images of China quake


Apr 20, 2010
Satellite images of China quake

WASHINGTON - GOOGLE released satellite imagery on Monday of the devastation from last week's earthquake which killed more than 2,000 people in north-west China. The imagery, available on Google Earth, the Internet giant's online mapping product, included a before-and-after picture of a city heavily damaged by the 6.9-magnitude quake in Qinghai province on Wednesday. Google said in a blog post that it had worked with satellite company GeoEye to obtain the high resolution post-earthquake pictures.

The Mountain View, California-based company also said 'many of our Chinese Googlers' had helped to create a 'Crisis Response' page for the earthquake. Google's relations with China have been strained since the Internet giant announced in January that it had been the victim of China-based cyberattacks. Google last month stopped censoring Web search results on its Chinese search engine and began redirecting users to an uncensored site in Hong Kong.

Google said the resources on the 'Crisis Response' page include a 'China Person Finder' tool that allows users to search for information about victims of the quake in Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese and English.
A 'My Map' program allows users to contribute data about Qinghai including information about rescue efforts and conditions in specific areas, Google said. Google said the Chinese version of the page can be accessed from a link on the homepages of google.com.hk and google.com.tw. -- AFP



 
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Paramilitary police stand next to religious figurines excavated from a destroyed temple in the earthquake-hit Gyegu town in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 19, 2010.The official death toll from an earthquake on China's remote Tibetan plateau has climbed to 2,039, state media said on Tuesday. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

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Chinese students gather for a candlelight vigil to remember the victims of the earthquake in Qinghai that has killed over 2,000 people, in Hefei, in central China's Anhui province. China on April 20 declared a national day of mourning for victims of the earthquake as rescuers worked around the clock under the threat of fast-approaching icy weather. -- PHOTO: AFP



 
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