China Quake Toll Could Exceed 80,000
Rescuers Still Trying To Reach Coal Miners Trapped By Earthquake
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A Chinese earthquake survivor carries her only remaining possessions as she walks through the ruins of a village on the edge of the town of Hongbai, Shifang county, in China's southwest Sichuan province Friday, May 23, 2008. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)
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Temporary housing for the victims of the May 12 quake is under construction in Dujiangyan, southwest China's Sichuan Province, on Friday, May 23, 2008. A resettlement residence project has started here on May 17 and is expected to be ready on May 27, China's Xinhua News Agency said. (AP Photo/Kyodo News)
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A grandfather places a photo of his grandson at a shrine in the ruins of the Fuxin No.2 Primary School in Wufu, in China's southwest Sichuan province, May 23, 2008. Parents of the 200 children who died when the school collapsed in an earthquake on May 12 are demanding an investigation into alleged shoddy construction. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)
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A panda bear is seen behind a glass enclosure near painted images of bamboo at the Beijing zoo, Saturday, May 24, 2008. Eight pandas have arrived safely in Beijing after a long journey from their damaged reserve near the epicenter of last week's deadly China earthquake. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
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Play CBS Video Video China's Quake Victims Recover Victims of the recent earthquake in China's Sichuan province are now recovering from extensive injuries. As Celia Hatton reports, many victims must now battle emotional as well as physical scars.
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Video China Mourns Quake Victims Sirens whaled across China signaling the start of a three day period of mourning, as the death toll from the killer earthquake topped 34,000. Celia Hatton reports.
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Video China Opens Doors To Aid China's unprecedented cooperation with its old rival, Japan, shows the toll the earthquake has taken is more than China can bear alone. Celia Hatton reports.
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Photo Essay China Grieves Death toll over 50,000; tens of thousands still trapped or missing after quake.
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Photos Quake Ravages China Images of the destruction and efforts to rescue those trapped in the rubble.
It was not known if the miners were alive, but authorities were hoping for the best until they learned otherwise, said Wang Dexue, the deputy chief of the government's work safety department.
"We have had the miracle in the past that a miner was found alive after being trapped underground for 21 days," Wang told a news conference in Beijing. "We are carrying out rescue work on the assumption that they are still alive. We absolutely will not give up."
The 24 miners were trapped in three mines in Sichuan province, Wang said, without giving further details. Sichuan bore the worst of the May 12 quake - China's biggest disaster in three decades.
China's mines are the world's deadliest, with explosions, cave-ins and floods killing nearly 3,800 people last year.
Premier Wen Jiabao returned to the quake zone on Saturday and hosted U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in a visit to Yingxiu, one of the hardest-hit towns.
The State Council, China's Cabinet, said the latest confirmed death toll for the quake was 60,560 and listed 26,221 people as still missing.
Wen warned the toll could go much higher, suggesting the government may be giving up hope of finding any more survivors.
"It may further climb to a level of 70,000, 80,000 or more," Wen told reporters in Yingxiu, near the earthquake's epicenter.
Ban, who came to China directly from another Asian disaster zone - cyclone-stricken Myanmar - promised the U.N. would help with reconstruction and that it was waiting for China's assessment of what was needed.
"If we work hard, we can overcome this," Ban said, with Wen standing at his side. "The whole world stands behind you and supports you."
A Chinese military officer took Ban on a tour of Yingxiu.
Some 4,800 of the town's 18,000 people were killed and another 4,000 remained missing, the officer told Ban. Most of the buildings in the town collapsed and those still standing were badly damaged. Reporters could see government workers in hooded white protective suits spraying disinfectant on the rubble.
We are carrying out rescue work on the assumption that they are still alive. We absolutely will not give up.
Wang DexueWith their water pooling, the blocked rivers could breach the earthen barriers - a danger that would grow with coming rains or aftershocks.
Relief workers grappled with getting tents, food and medical care to the displaced. Wen said the government needed 900,000, tents and urged Chinese manufacturers to make 30,000 a day.
The Environmental Protection Ministry said experts from its National Nuclear Safety Administration were trying to contain the 15 unspecified "sources" of radiation.
Some 50 potential radiation sources were buried by the quake, Environment Vice Minister Wu Xiaoqing said Friday in Beijing. While 35 had been secured, 15 remained buried and inaccessible under buildings and houses, he said.
Wu said the radiation was not leaking. China has said all nuclear facilities are safe and foreign experts have said the unsecured radiation material was likely from hospitals, factories or research facilities.
Even as the government battled to bring relief to the devastated areas, it shifted focus to long-term reconstruction and away from the search for survivors and bodies among the wreckage.
"Previously our main priority was the search and rescue of affected people," Wen said. "Our priority now is to resettle the affected people and to make plans for post-quake reconstruction."
The quake destroyed more than 15 million homes, Wen said. He said the government has launched an urgent effort to build temporary housing and schools, and organize trash collection.
Some 10,000 medical workers have been dispatched to prevent disease outbreaks, Wen said.
"The second major challenge facing us is epidemic prevention and control," the premier said, adding that no outbreaks had been reported so far.
Sichuan Vice Governor Li Chengyun said the province would aim to rebuild roads and cities within three years.
Beijing ordered China's richest provinces and cities to adopt areas that were hit hard by the quake and to start sending aid right away, especially tents and drinking water.
In the quake-hit city of Pengzhou, signs urged people to pay attention to hygiene to prevent disease outbreaks.
As many as 9,000 injured would be transported to other provinces, Li said. He said more psychologists were needed to help survivors cope, especially children orphaned by the quake.
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- No, why not make it a round 200,000!
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Posted by JesusFace at 07:47 PM : May 24, 2008
+ report abuse
Why not make it a round 100,000!
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Posted by JesusFace at 07:45 PM : May 24, 2008
report abuse
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Are these mercy? human right? or western sence of worth? - Reply to this comment
- China has successfully displayed its international stature by tackiling the quake disasster openly and simultaneously signing a major nuke deal with Russia.
American pundits and the CIA have once again failed miserably in anticipating the nuke deal.It is really shocking that NYT and Washington Post don''t know everything !!! - Reply to this comment
- Don''t worry, this is how many american will die in Iraq.
- Reply to this comment
- Yeah this is where we should hold the Olympics, now there is also foot and mouth disease to contend with. What the heck was the IOC thinking.
- Reply to this comment
There were no rebars in the concrete to reinforce it, so the concrete columns just snapped very easily and the buildings fell. On NBC news a reporter went around the USGS and they pointed to the reporter where the base of concrete column was just plain concrete.
http://upload.wikimedia.org
/wikipedia/commons/b/b9/RebarCloseup.jpg
Posted by george2221 at 10:42 AM : May 24, 2008,,,
This implies that China is really a House of Cards!- Reply to this comment
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