BEICHUAN, China, May 17, 2008

Aftershocks, Flood Fears Force Evacuations

Survivors Still Found As China Quake Toll Nears 29,000; Officials Warn River Blocked By Landslides May Burst

    • Residents evacuate for higher ground in Beichuan county, southwest China's Sichuan province, Saturday, May 17, 2008. Thousands of earthquake victims are fleeing areas near the epicenter, fearful of floods from a river blocked by landslides.

      Residents evacuate for higher ground in Beichuan county, southwest China's Sichuan province, Saturday, May 17, 2008. Thousands of earthquake victims are fleeing areas near the epicenter, fearful of floods from a river blocked by landslides.  (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

    • An eight-year-old student is carried by soldiers after he was found in a school some five days after Monday's deadly quake, as rescuers continue to search for survivors in Beichuan County, Saturday, May 17, 2008.

      An eight-year-old student is carried by soldiers after he was found in a school some five days after Monday's deadly quake, as rescuers continue to search for survivors in Beichuan County, Saturday, May 17, 2008.  (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

    • Residents and soldiers evacuate to higher ground in Beichuan County, Saturday, May 17, 2008.

      Residents and soldiers evacuate to higher ground in Beichuan County, Saturday, May 17, 2008.  (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

    Previous slide Next slide
  • Play CBS Video Video Quake Tests China's Mettle

    Foreign rescue workers are now allowed to enter China, Celia Hatton reports; and Harry Smith talks to two American survivors who were close to the quake's epicenter.

  • Video China Appeals For Aid

    China is appealing for international aid as the death toll from the deadly quake continues to rise as rescuers discover more and more victims. Celia Hatton reports.

  • Video China Eager To Display Rescues

    "Only On The Web": With the Beijing Olympics less than 3 months away, China is challenged to do its best in recovery efforts after the quake. Celia Hatton reports.

  • Photo Essay Reduced To Rubble

    Buildings, bridges, roads in ruins after devastating China quake.

  • Photos Quake Ravages China

    Images of the destruction and efforts to rescue those trapped in the rubble.

  • Photo Essay Trapped In The Rubble

    Rescue workers dig through schools and homes toppled by China's worst quake in decades.

(AP)  Thousands of Chinese earthquake victims fled areas near the epicenter Saturday, fearful of floods from rivers blocked by landslides rattled loose in this week's powerful temblor.

Soldiers carried older people out of Beichuan town - one of the areas hit hardest by the magnitude 7.9 quake Monday - while survivors cradled babies on a road jammed with vehicles and people.

The evacuation underscored the jitters running through the disaster zone. A severe aftershock - the second in two days and measured by the U.S. Geological Survey at magnitude 6 - shook the area early Sunday for 45 seconds, causing people to run into the streets.

A policeman told The Associated Press that rescue officials were worried that water from a choked river would inundate the town.

"The river was jammed up by a landslide, now that may burst. That is what we are worried about," the policeman said as he hurried by, not giving his name.

"I'm very scared. I heard that the water will be crashing down here," said Liang Xiao, one of the people fleeing. "If that happens, there will be over 10 yards of water over our heads."

The official Xinhua News Agency said earlier that a lake in Beichuan county "may burst its bank at any time," but did not give details on why the water was rising. Residents left homes for higher ground, but 46 seriously injured were still at risk, the agency said.

Farther north, a mountain sheared off by the quake cut the Qingzhu River and smothered three villages in a valley near Qingchuan town. No traces remained of the villages, swallowed up by a huge mound of earth behind which the cut-off river's waters were backing up.

Xinhua said more than 2,000 people were being evacuated near Qingchuan.

Rain began to fall in Qingchuan county on Saturday evening for the first time since the initial quake, the agency reported - increasing the risk of floods and more building collapses, and worsening living conditions for homeless survivors sheltered under tents and makeshift canopies.

The confirmed death toll rose Saturday to 28,881, Cabinet spokesman Guo Weimin said.

But more than 10,600 people remained buried in Sichuan province, Xinhua reported, and the government has previously said at least 50,000 people were believed killed in the disaster.

The government has decided to give 5,000 yuan ($715) in temporary compensation to each family who had lost a member in the earthquake, China National Radio said Saturday. At a State Council meeting hosted by Premier Wen Jiabao in Beijing, the government also decided it would also hand out a daily ration of food and 10 yuan ($1.40) to victims, the report said.

Survivors still were being found under destroyed buildings five days after the quake. A 52-year-old man buried in the ruins for 117 hours was pulled to safety in Beichuan, Xinhua reported. Two other survivors were later found alive 120 hours after the quake elsewhere in Sichuan, the agency said.

Rescuers worked through the day - using saws, drills and their hands - to free a woman pinned under a crumpled six-story apartment building in Longhua town after 124 hours in the rubble, a day after another person was pulled alive from the same place.

Covered in mud and dust, 31-year-old Bian Gengfeng was taken away by medics who covered her eyes with a towel.

Bian's 10-year-old daughter watched the rescue.

"Uncle called me yesterday and said Mom was alive and I should come and wait here," said Luo Ting.

The man pulled from the rubble the day before prompted the rescue, telling rescuers that he had been talking with a woman trapped in the building that had been housing for chemical workers.

The vast majority of survivors are rescued in the first 24 hours after a disaster, with the chances of survival dropping each day, said Dr. Irving "Jake" Jacoby of the University of California, San Diego, who heads a medical assistance team that responded to a 1989 earthquake in California, Hurricane Katrina and other disasters.

A person trapped but uninjured could survive a week or even 10 days and in extreme circumstances two weeks or more, he said.

Rescue teams from South Korea, Singapore and Russia began work Saturday. They joined a Japanese specialist group, which was the first international rescue crew to arrive in the disaster area after China dropped its initial reluctance to accepting foreign personnel.

A U.S. Air Force cargo plane loaded with tents, lanterns and 15,000 meals left Hawaii on Saturday, the first aid flight from the United States to help in Sichuan province. Another Air Force delivery was to fly in from Alaska.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice expressed sympathy over the tragedy to Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi during a Saturday phone call and said Washington was ready to give further support, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The United Nations announced a grant of up to $7 million from its Central Emergency Response Fund, to be used by U.N. agencies and programs.

Aftershocks continued, also shaking President Hu Jintao as he praised rescue workers during a tour of the destruction.

"You carried out the order of the party, government and the central military committee determinedly. You contributed to the relief efforts," Hu told troops in Wenchuan county before the shaking prompted him to pause and glance over a hill before he went on, "despite difficulty, weariness and harshness."

The government has not given a figure for the number of people left homeless, but Housing Minister Jiang Weixin said more than 4 million apartments and homes were damaged or destroyed in Sichuan province. He said the water supply situation was "extremely serious" in Sichuan, and not flowing at all in 20 cities and counties.

Caring for the untold tens of thousands or more survivors across the earthquake zone was stretching government resources.

Just north of the provincial capital of Chengdu, the town square in Shifang had become a tent camp for 2,000 people, and coordinator Li Yuanshao reported a lack of tents. Many people walked in from surrounding towns with few belongings.

"We brought almost nothing, only the clothes we are wearing," said Zhang Xinyong, a high school junior who walked several hours to the camp.

The Ministry of Health said there had been no major outbreaks of epidemics or other public health hazards in the earthquake area, according to Xinhua. By late Friday, hospitals in Sichuan had received 116,460 patients, including nearly 16,000 severely injured.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by al2008-2009 May 20, 2008 5:58 PM EDT
I%u2019m appalled at the administration%u2019s lack of response to the global warming earthquakes, hurricanes, and cyclones as well. We have no comprehensive strategy in place whatsoever, let alone a detailed plan of action to mitigate the effects of these quakes and cyclones, and mother earth continues to suffer while the administration refuses to go forward and do what%u2019s right for mother earth.
.
How long must we sit idly by while our mother continues to suffer from the warming taking place at a feverish pace? How long must our mother suffer before we have proper c02 taxes put into place? How long must the destruction of mother earth take place before we finally put responsible regulations into effect? How long must we wait until we beef up our corn ethanol production? At least Obama wants to cut c02 pollution by 80%; he is definitely our best hope.
.
We the people call upon our leaders to implement a comprehensive antiglobal warming strategy at once and work in coordination with state and federal officials; these quakes, cyclones and disasters continue to worsen and the quicker we stop the warming the sooner we will see these quakes and storms cease. We need action now.

Reply to this comment
by ssm9451 May 18, 2008 12:18 AM EDT
ELVES7~how can we help them-we can''t even help ourselves.
Reply to this comment
by jacobsf1 May 17, 2008 10:17 PM EDT
I wonder what the coverage & response would have been if the earthquake had taken place 8 months earlier, when Team USA women''s national soccer team played a World Cup game v. North Korea, a game that ended in a 2-2 tie, in Chengdu, Sichuan''s capital.
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by jboxton May 17, 2008 5:36 PM EDT
Perhaps they should call on General Tso for help
Reply to this comment
by elves7 May 17, 2008 3:19 PM EDT
i am so tired of hearing about all the different people classes creeds races sexes borderds take a look at the world the people are dying everywhere love your nieghbor plant a garden walk to work do vote do something! k.c. co
Reply to this comment
by elves7 May 17, 2008 2:59 PM EDT
the people of china are a wondeful people who will rise above this teribel traigity and help each other in the process ,can we help them also?
Reply to this comment
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