AP/ February 11, 2009, 2:53 PM

160,000 Evacuated In Valley Near China Dam

Nearly 160,000 people have been evacuated downstream from an unstable earthquake-created dam that is threatening to collapse, and troops rushed to carve a trench to drain the water before it floods the valley.

The threat of flooding comes even as quake aftershocks continue to hit the region. Two temblors Tuesday collapsed hundreds of thousands of homes, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Dozens of villages were emptied, the official China Daily said Wednesday. It quoted Premier Wen Jiabao as telling a meeting of the State Council, China's Cabinet, that handling the danger from the swelling lakes was the "most pressing task" right now.

The newspaper said 158,000 people had been evacuated in case the newly formed Tangjiashan lake bursts before soldiers and engineers can drain off water from it.

Dozens of lakes have been swelling behind walls of mud and rubble that have plugged narrow valleys in parts of the disaster zone, adding a new worry for millions of survivors.

More than 30 villages were emptied and the people were being sent to camps like the one outside Jiangyou, where an Associated Press reporter saw 12-15 people crammed into each of about 40 government-issued tents pitched on a hillside overlooking the river.

"We were told that so far it is the safest place for us to stay if the dam of the lake crashes," said Liu Yuhua, whose village of Huangshi was one of those emptied. "But we will have to move farther uphill if the situation turns out to be worse."

Xinhua said emergency workers labored into the night to try to get 80,000 people out. Another group of about 80,000 had already been moved out of the valley, it said.

Troops on Tuesday used explosives to blow up tree stumps that were hampering heavy-duty excavators that were airlifted by helicopter in recent days to the newly formed Tangjiashan lake near the town of Beichuan, Xinhua said.

The magnitude-7.9 quake that struck Sichuan province May 12 sent a mass of dirt and rocks tumbling in the valley about two miles above the town in a spot not reached by roads, plugging a river that is now forming the lake.

Elsewhere in the region, workers also used explosives to level some buildings that were left teetering by the quake - a further sign that officials have stopped rescue and recovery efforts in some places.

The number of deaths from the quake climbed toward an expected toll of 80,000 or more. China's Cabinet said Tuesday that 68,109 people were confirmed killed, with 19,851 still missing.

Aftershocks have been a steady threat, causing more damage and injuries and jangling the already-frayed nerves of survivors. Xinhua said the two on Tuesday caused more than 420,000 houses to collapse in Qingchuan county. Sixty-three people were injured, including six who were critically hurt.

The U.S. Geological Survey measured a magnitude-5.2 aftershock just after 4 p.m. (4 a.m. EDT) and one measuring 5.7 about a half-hour later.

In a live broadcast, state television showed heavy earth-moving equipment being used to carve a 200-yard channel to drain the water from the Tangjiashan lake.

"We are prepared to get rid of the trees by chopping and explosion. After that, the second batch of equipment will be moved in," Liu Ning, chief engineer at the Ministry of Water Resources, was quoted as saying on CCTV.

At Tangjiashan lake, hundreds of troops were working around the clock to dig a channel that would divert the rising waters before they breach the top of the rubble wall. Officials fear the loose soil and debris wall could crumble easily if the water starts cascading over the top, and send a torrent flooding down into the valley.

The lake now holds 34 billion gallons of water and was rising by more than 3 feet every 24 hours, Xinhua reported.

Tangjiashan is the largest of some 35 lakes created by rubble blocking rivers in the quake zone. Some rising floodwaters have already swallowed villages, though only Tangjiashan was posing a risk of another big catastrophe.

Adding to the urgency, thunderstorms were forecast for parts of Sichuan this week - a foretaste of the summer rainy season that accounts for more than 70 percent of the 24 inches of rain that falls on the area each year.

Man-made dams in the mountainous region were also weakened by the quake, although officials said there is no major threat.

At one dam site near the town of Mianyang, villagers working in nearby rice fields said cracks had appeared in the dam wall after the quake but that government workers had reinforced it with steel rods.

In the town of Yingxiu, explosives were used to demolish some damaged buildings, a new element to the massive cleanup operation. Teams have been pulling down creaky buildings across Sichuan using mostly excavators, bulldozers and other heavy machinery.

Also Tuesday, health officials said higher-than-normal rates of stomach pains and fever had been reported among the millions of quake survivors, but that no major disease outbreaks had occurred.

About 5 million people were left homeless by the quake, and many are living in tents or makeshift camps clustered throughout the disaster zone.

Qi Xiaoqiu, the director of disease prevention at the Health Ministry, said the quake had knocked out much of the region's health infrastructure. He said 12 field hospitals had been erected and tens of thousands of health professionals sent into the zone.

"With the destruction by the quake, the living and sanitary conditions have worsened for the local population," Qi said in Beijing. "Their physical conditions are weakened, (they are) more vulnerable to disease."

Diseases such as tuberculosis, hepatitis and diarrhea remained a threat, but so far no outbreaks had been reported, he said.
© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
7 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
al2008-2009 says:
I*m appalled at the administration*s 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*s 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
linkicon reporticon emailicon
lovesamerica says:
The Chinese people,bless their souls, do not seem to be gripping as much as our fellow Katrina victims did.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
says:
Here in Oklahoma, we have disasters every year, whether it be a tornado, flood or ice storm. We just take care of our own and not worry about the government to handle our problems. Have you heard anyone from here wondering why FEMA isn''t at the locations handing out food and water to the victims of all the devastating tornadoes so far this year? NO.....we all chip in and take care of our own.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
says:
Always Katrina, good grief. New Orleans is just as guilty as the government....blame the freaking mayor and governor. Plus, they knew it was coming 72 hours before it hit.....why didn''t they evacuate themselves before it hit? Oh yeah...they were waiting on the government to do it for them....good Lord, let it go. Not EVERYTHING needs to be compared to Katrina.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
hbevis says:
rharrin1: Yes, their government was on site hours after the quake struck....it was several days before the US goverment cut through the bureaucracy and got to the Katrina victims.

"Brownie, you''''re doin'''' a heck of a job."

Posted by gocubs58 at 06:30 AM : May 28, 2008

It would seem that you are right. Its not just the Katrina mess, it is the mess that the Bureaucrats make of everything they do. Our Congress makes the laws and the Bureaucrats implements them like they see fit. Most of the time it is a mess.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
barbaraf4 says:
The Bush philosophy of disaster management: Ignore it and it will go away.

reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
gocubs58 says:
rharrin1: Yes, their government was on site hours after the quake struck....it was several days before the US goverment cut through the bureaucracy and got to the Katrina victims.

"Brownie, you''re doin'' a heck of a job."
reply