BEICHUAN, China, May 18, 2008

Search For Quake Survivors Turns Bleak

With Death Toll Expected To Reach 50,000, China Declares National Mourning, Suspends Olympic Torch Relay

    • Rescuers carry a survivor on a stretcher after pulling him out of a hotel collapsed following Monday's earthquake at Yingxiu Township, Saturday, May 17, 2008. The search for survivors in the rubble of China's powerful earthquake grew bleak Sunday, with rescuers in some areas no longer listening for trapped victims.

      Rescuers carry a survivor on a stretcher after pulling him out of a hotel collapsed following Monday's earthquake at Yingxiu Township, Saturday, May 17, 2008. The search for survivors in the rubble of China's powerful earthquake grew bleak Sunday, with rescuers in some areas no longer listening for trapped victims.  (AP Photo/Kyodo News)

    • Chinese soldiers carry the body of an earthquake victim over the ruins of collapsed buildings in Beichuan, in China's southwest Sichuan province on Sunday, May 18, 2008.

      Chinese soldiers carry the body of an earthquake victim over the ruins of collapsed buildings in Beichuan, in China's southwest Sichuan province on Sunday, May 18, 2008.  (AP Photo/Greg Baker)

    • Rescuers carry a survivor on a stretcher after pulling him out of a hotel collapsed following Monday's earthquake at Yingxiu Township, Saturday, May 17, 2008. The search for survivors in the rubble of China's powerful earthquake grew bleak Sunday, with rescuers in some areas no longer listening for trapped victims.

      Rescuers carry a survivor on a stretcher after pulling him out of a hotel collapsed following Monday's earthquake at Yingxiu Township, Saturday, May 17, 2008. The search for survivors in the rubble of China's powerful earthquake grew bleak Sunday, with rescuers in some areas no longer listening for trapped victims.  (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

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  • 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.

(AP)  China declared three days of national mourning for earthquake victims and ordered a suspension of the Olympic torch relay, as the search for survivors of the disaster grew bleak Sunday.

The State Council, China's Cabinet, said the mourning period would start Monday and include three minutes of silence observed by citizens nationwide starting at 2:28 p.m. (0628 GMT) - exactly a week after the magnitude 7.9 quake struck central China - while horns of vehicles, trains, ships and air raid sirens wail in grief.

All national flags will fly at half-staff at home and at Chinese diplomatic missions abroad, and public recreational activities will be halted, the council said.

Beijing Olympic organizers said in a statement that the torch relay would also be suspended for three days "to express our deep mourning to the victims of the earthquake."

The relay had already resumed last week after the quake on a more somber note, with runners starting with a minute of silence and asking for donations along the route. Organizers have said the relay will go on as planned in quake-hit Sichuan province next month.

In the disaster zone, efforts appeared to shift Sunday from searching for buried survivors to clearing corpses from shattered buildings as the government said the confirmed death toll rose to 32,476.

Another 220,109 people suffered injuries, according to a statement from the State Council. The government has said it expects the final death toll will surpass 50,000.

Near the quake's epicenter, few hopeful relatives were seen in Beichuan, where several dozen corpses in blue body bags lay in a street. Soldiers regularly pulled more dead from the wreckage.

"It will soon be too late" to find trapped survivors, said Koji Fujiya, deputy leader of a Japanese rescue team that pulled 10 bodies from a flattened school Sunday. "We hope with our hard work we will find more people alive."

Wu Hai, a Chinese rescue team leader who came from neighboring Yunnan province, said bodies in the town being found were in the middle stages of decomposition and "many of the limbs are broken off."

"There are definitely many more (bodies) here. Locals here said several thousands have been buried here," he said.

A "slightly bruised" man was pulled out alive from a collapsed hospital Sunday after being trapped for 139 hours, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. Experts say buried earthquake survivors can live a week or more, depending on factors including the temperature and whether they have water to drink.

A Malaysian rescue team in the town of Muyu, further north, sifted slowly and methodically through the wreckage. However, they were not tapping on the debris in hopes that survivors would hear and respond as other crews had done earlier - instead using giant cutters to split steel girders.

Dozens of students were buried in new graves dotting a green hillside overlooking the rubble, the small mounds of dirt failing to block the pungent smell of decay wafting from the ground. Most graves were unmarked, though several had wooden markers with names scribbled on them.

Zhou Bencen, 36, said he raced to the town's middle school after the earthquake, where relatives who arrived earlier had dug out the body of his 13-year-old daughter, Zhou Xiao, crushed on the first floor.

(AP Photo/Kyodo News)
[Rescuers and residents look at collapsed houses and buildings destroyed by Monday's earthquake in Beichuan, Sunday, May 18, 2008.]

Zhou cradled his wife in his arms, holding her hand and stroking her back while she sobbed hysterically. "Oh God, oh God, why is life so bitter?" Liao Jinju wailed, over and over. The couple's 9-year-old son survived.

The World Health Organization said conditions for homeless survivors were ripe for outbreaks of disease and called for quick action to supply clean water and proper hygiene facilities.

"Ensuring supply of food and safe drinking water and trying to restore good sanitation are critical because these are basic transmission routes for communicable diseases," said Hans Troedsson, WHO's representative to China.

Chinese health officials have not reported any disaster-related outbreaks so far.

Meanwhile, flood threats from rivers blocked by landslides from the quake appeared to have eased after three waterways near the epicenter overflowed with no problems, Xinhua said. County officials diverted released water as a precaution.

The quake damaged some water projects, such as reservoirs and hydroelectric stations, but no reservoirs had burst, Liu Ning, engineer in chief with the Ministry of Water Resources, told Xinhua.

Nuclear facilities jolted by the quake were confirmed safe and troops were sent to reinforce security there, air force Maj. Gen. Ma Jian, deputy chief of operations for the military's General Staff Headquarters, told reporters in Beijing.

China has a research reactor, two nuclear fuel production sites and two atomic weapons sites in Sichuan province, the French nuclear watchdog has said, all located 40-90 miles from the epicenter.

Also in the quake area, three giant pandas were missing from the world's most famous reserve for the endangered animals. Panda houses at the reserve were severely damaged and five staff members there were killed, forestry spokesman Cao Qingyao told Xinhua.

The 60 other giant pandas at the Wolong Nature Reserve were safe, according to the agency.

Chinese President Hu Jintao has urged rescue teams to reach remote villages battered by the earthquake where the level of damage remained unknown, according to Xinhua.

That was reinforced by a group of about 15 people who surrounded an Associated Press reporter at a gasoline station in Mianyang city Sunday, appealing for help for their village, Xiushui.

"The government is doing nothing to help us," said one man, who identified himself only by his surname, Chen. "If I gave you my complete name the government would track me down."

Chen did not say how many people lived there. He handed over a note signed "by the people of Xiushui," reading: "Please go to our village of Xiushui to cover the situation. The government is doing nothing to help us get water or housing."

More international aid was arriving, with two U.S. Air Force cargo planes loaded with tents, lanterns and 15,000 meals landing Sunday in the Sichuan provincial capital of Chengdu.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Add a Comment
by baby_lynn May 19, 2008 5:10 AM EDT
thank you all for caring people in quake aeras, and thank you all for the helps :)
Reply to this comment
by baby_lynn May 19, 2008 5:07 AM EDT
when we close our door, you send artilleries and opiums to us ;When we open our door and hug the free tade,you said we rub your jobs and food; we have hundred million people,you said we would destroy the earth, when we control the population, you said we were attacking human rights ....what do you want to do ? you just cant accept a developing china ? tell us why.

by the way, one of my friends is a soldier,they arrived at XiuShui on last last thrusday, they transfered to another small town this morning ..how can you people said that our government didnt do anything for you?

http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=china+stand up&search_type=

Every chinese people is doing everything possible to help, because that we are living in one family. personally i dont care about what western people or press sayings now, i dont expect others understanding anymore .


Reply to this comment
by shujian May 19, 2008 2:34 AM EDT
you have to suicide then have right to tell quake control population.
Reply to this comment
by Marie Zarankevich May 19, 2008 12:00 AM EDT
I suppose the Chinese leaders were doing what they considered wisest when they made the ''One Child'' law. -- Left to themselves, the people would not control their populations. so their government did it for them. -- Makes sense to me. -- As for the people who built those schools, they probably thought they were sturdy enough. -- Just not for major earthquakes. -- I''m sure they all wish they had never been born about now. -- Things will not go easy for them. -- What a horrible tragedy for China, to lose so many people so quickly, and so many children.
Reply to this comment
by planethearth May 18, 2008 6:31 PM EDT
we,as the world have been in a quite seismic lull for a very long time, the earth is just waking up! it is our responsibility to make good decisions on how and what we do and live. do we give aid to this or that? do we wage war for what? do we drill? do we rely on our governments too much? can you put yourself in their shoes? what would you do? can you rely on yourself if your government cannot be there to help? prepare,educate yourself on what you can do for yourself in case this is you, or your family, or neighbor. we do not know what the earth will do next. look at the last 10 years, 20 years. it is your responsibility to prepare, who is next?
Reply to this comment
by republic1776 May 18, 2008 5:27 PM EDT
lewiston14,
There''s more than enough food in this world.
The Evil and the Rich hord it.
They sell carbon credits, and shame people having Babies.
Bottom line is the Rich and evil oONLY want their babies to live.
The "lower" clases wil;l be pemitted to have babies, because we do need slaves!

Reply to this comment
by lewiston14 May 18, 2008 4:20 PM EDT
Lett put it real terms. The world does not need anymore population for a long time. You may ask about me. If I was never born I would not know. People always ask what to do to save the world, start by cutting the population in half. Half of gases releaced, half of energy used, half of food needed. You might hate the idea but it is the only one that will work.
Reply to this comment
by lewiston14 May 18, 2008 4:12 PM EDT
China had to do something to control population unlike some countries where the OP dies by the millions. Good idea I dont know, Bad idea I dont know either. The world IS a finate ball and if left out of control your going to see ten of millions die every year. The world can not keep up. No matter where is happens nobody is prepared to dig a 100,000 people out of a pile of rocks in two days. Most of the time it happens in an area where the BIG equipment can not go for weeks. Picture NYC. If the middle of it was hit by a quake how many weeks would it take to move billions of pounds of rubble out of the way with no place to put it.
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