URUMQI, China, June 18, 2008

Woman Rescued From Quake Gives Birth

Healthy Baby Girl Born To Woman Trapped 50 Hours In China Quake Rubble

    • A nurse checks pregnant earthquake survivor Zhang Xiaoyan shortly before she gave birth to a baby girl at a hospital in Urumqi, in China's western Xinjiang region, Wednesday, June 18, 2008. Zhang was rescued on May 14 after being trapped for more than two days in a collapsed building. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)

      A nurse checks pregnant earthquake survivor Zhang Xiaoyan shortly before she gave birth to a baby girl at a hospital in Urumqi, in China's western Xinjiang region, Wednesday, June 18, 2008. Zhang was rescued on May 14 after being trapped for more than two days in a collapsed building. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)  (AP PHOTO)

    • Earthquake survivor Zhang Xiaoyan looks at her newborn baby girl at a hospital in Urumqi, in China's western Xinjiang region Wednesday, June 18, 2008. Zhang was rescued on May 14 after being trapped for more than two days in a collapsed building. The baby was named Ai, or love, in honor of the rescue workers and strangers who have showered Zhang with kindness, gifts, and VIP treatment in the month since she was pulled out of the debris. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)

      Earthquake survivor Zhang Xiaoyan looks at her newborn baby girl at a hospital in Urumqi, in China's western Xinjiang region Wednesday, June 18, 2008. Zhang was rescued on May 14 after being trapped for more than two days in a collapsed building. The baby was named Ai, or love, in honor of the rescue workers and strangers who have showered Zhang with kindness, gifts, and VIP treatment in the month since she was pulled out of the debris. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)  (AP PHOTO)

    • Earthquake survivor Zhang Xiaoyan kisses her newborn baby girl at a hospital in Urumqi, in China's western Xinjiang region Wednesday, June 18, 2008. Zhang, who was rescued on May 14 after being trapped for more than two days in a collapsed building. The baby was named Ai, or love, in honor of the rescue workers and strangers who have showered Zhang with kindness, gifts, and VIP treatment in the month since she was pulled out of the debris. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)

      Earthquake survivor Zhang Xiaoyan kisses her newborn baby girl at a hospital in Urumqi, in China's western Xinjiang region Wednesday, June 18, 2008. Zhang, who was rescued on May 14 after being trapped for more than two days in a collapsed building. The baby was named Ai, or love, in honor of the rescue workers and strangers who have showered Zhang with kindness, gifts, and VIP treatment in the month since she was pulled out of the debris. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)  (AP PHOTO)

    • A nurse wraps up a newborn baby girl, who was born to earthquake survivor Zhang Xiaoyan, at a hospital in Urumqi, in China's western Xinjiang region Wednesday, June 18, 2008. Zhang, who was rescued on May 14 after being trapped for more than two days in a collapsed building. The baby was named Ai, or love, in honor of the rescue workers and strangers who have showered Zhang with kindness, gifts, and VIP treatment in the month since she was pulled out of the debris. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)

      A nurse wraps up a newborn baby girl, who was born to earthquake survivor Zhang Xiaoyan, at a hospital in Urumqi, in China's western Xinjiang region Wednesday, June 18, 2008. Zhang, who was rescued on May 14 after being trapped for more than two days in a collapsed building. The baby was named Ai, or love, in honor of the rescue workers and strangers who have showered Zhang with kindness, gifts, and VIP treatment in the month since she was pulled out of the debris. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)  (AP PHOTO)

    • In this May 14, 2008 file photo, Zhang Xiaoyan, then 8 months pregnant, is pulled alive from an apartment that partially collapsed in Dujiangyan, southwestern China's Sichuan province. Zhang gave birth to a girl Wednesday, June 18, 2008. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File)

      In this May 14, 2008 file photo, Zhang Xiaoyan, then 8 months pregnant, is pulled alive from an apartment that partially collapsed in Dujiangyan, southwestern China's Sichuan province. Zhang gave birth to a girl Wednesday, June 18, 2008. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File)  (AP PHOTO)

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(AP)  China's May earthquake took nearly 70,000 lives. On Wednesday, in a certain sense, it gave one back.

Zhang Xiaoyan, who had been trapped under the rubble for 50 hours while eight-months pregnant, delivered a healthy baby girl Wednesday, in a tender coda to the massive tragedy. All through the ordeal, Zhang said, she had hoped only for her daughter to be born.

"Even if I didn't make it, I just wanted my baby to survive. I was holding out hope during the earthquake that this day would come," Zhang, 35, said Wednesday as she reclined in a hospital bed in the Urumqi Maternal Care Hospital in her home region of Xinjiang in China's far west. Her daughter, swaddled in a pink floral blanket, lay beside her.

Zhang named the pink-cheeked, 7-pound, 4-ounce (3.3-kilogram) girl Ai, or love, in honor of the rescue workers and strangers who have showered her with kindness, gifts and VIP treatment in the month since she was pulled out of the debris.

Zhang's rescue in the city of Dujiangyan set off celebrations among soldiers and fire crews who had dug, cut and hammered painstakingly through debris in Zhang's half-collapsed seven-story apartment building, which they feared could come crashing down at any minute. Zhang and her 63-year-old mother, who was also rescued, had been trapped under about 18 feet (six meters) of bricks and cement slabs.

In the final moments, a backhoe was maneuvered into place and Zhang gently placed inside. An excited, overjoyed rescuer gave a thumbs-up and onlookers burst into cheers and applause.

Reporters who had anxiously watched the slow progress for hours high-fived each other and Sun Guoli, fire chief of the provincial capital, Chengdu, who was overseeing the operation, declared it "a miracle of life, using one's life to save a life."

The image of rescue workers pulling Zhang onto a stretcher, her stomach protruding from under a blue sweater and pink pants, was played on TV screens and newspapers across the country.

Taken on a stretcher to a waiting ambulance amid a throng of photographers and cameramen, Zhang was rushed first to a damaged hospital in the even more devastated town before being transferred to a bigger facility in Chengdu and declared out of harm's way.

A celebrity since she was taken to the Urumqi hospital, Zhang said she was grateful for all the care and attention she has received from the medical staff, who banded together to donate new sets of clothes and presents for her and the baby.

The family are now among the 5 million quake homeless and Zhang said she plans to stay in Xinjiang with her mother until living conditions improve in Sichuan. She had moved there after high school in Xinjiang, and met her husband there.

Her husband, Pan Yuncheng, a native of Sichuan, remains in Dujiangyan, where he is living in a refugee camp.

The couple talked to each other briefly by telephone Wednesday during an interview set up by a local radio station.

"I want to thank all the people that were helpful. It was very moving," he said, as his daughter gave out a loud cry over the phone.


© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 11 Comments
by barbaraf4 June 19, 2008 1:25 AM EDT
"barbara you need help how could you say that how do you sleep at night?" Posted by afitzgerald4
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I sleep very well, thank you.

I speak the truth. I have known several couples who have adopted Chinese infants - always female. I''ve heard the stories and seen pictures of the conditions.
Reply to this comment
by lovesamerica June 19, 2008 1:02 AM EDT
The human spirit does it again. I wish only the best for this woman and her baby.
Reply to this comment
by feelfree4u June 19, 2008 12:55 AM EDT

Wow!

It shook the placenta out of her!
Reply to this comment
by haoli25 June 18, 2008 11:57 PM EDT
With 1.3 billion of them, that''s just what the Chinese need is another kid. A rowboat would have been more practical.
Reply to this comment
by oneworldusa June 18, 2008 11:14 PM EDT
Always very nice to see a new hope come from a terrible tragedy. God bless this baby and her mom.
Reply to this comment
by afitzgerald4 June 18, 2008 8:37 PM EDT
barbara you need help how could you say that how do you sleep at night?
Reply to this comment
by hypnotoad72 June 18, 2008 8:34 PM EDT
I have always wondered what China and India, both of whom worship the male child, will use for brood mares when there are no females left.

Posted by barbaraf4
--------------------

Anti-woman or otherwise, regarding their cultures, it''s amazing how high their populations have gotten, thanks to the hard work OF women.
Reply to this comment
by barbaraf4 June 18, 2008 6:45 PM EDT
As soon as the lights and reports leave, the child will be put up for adoption or killed. Too bad, but with a limit of one child per couple, if it isn''t a boy then too bad.

I have always wondered what China and India, both of whom worship the male child, will use for brood mares when there are no females left.
Reply to this comment
by jetlizhan June 18, 2008 6:28 PM EDT
what a nice and happy story - cute baby.
Reply to this comment
by omgomgomg1 June 18, 2008 5:45 PM EDT
So is this baby the re-incarnation of the new Dalai Lama? Wow...Buddism works...
Reply to this comment
by faith_in_w June 18, 2008 5:32 PM EDT
God spared her so she could give birth and someday be allowed to get into heaven.
Reply to this comment
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