The 7.8-magnitude earthquake devastated a hilly region of small cities and towns in Sichuan
and nearby provinces. The official Xinhua News Agency said 8,533 people
died in Sichuan alone and dozens of other deaths were reported in
surrounding areas. Xinhua said 80 percent of the buildings had
collapsed in Sichuan province's Beichuan county after the quake,
raising fears the overall death toll could increase sharply.
State media said a chemical plant in Shifang city had cratered, burying
hundreds of people and spilling more than 80 tons of toxic liquid
ammonia from the site. The earthquake sent thousands of people
rushing out of buildings and into the streets hundreds of miles away in
Beijing and Shanghai. The temblor was felt as far away as Vietnam and
Thailand. It posed a challenge to a government already
grappling with discontent over high inflation and a widespread uprising
among Tibetans in western China while trying to prepare for the Beijing
Olympics this August. The quake hit about 60 miles northwest
of Chengdu—a city of 3.75 million—in the middle of the afternoon when
classrooms and office towers were full. There were several smaller
aftershocks, the U.S. Geological Survey said on its Web site.
The temblor struck hilly country leading up to the Tibetan highlands,
toppling buildings in small cities and towns in the largely rural area.
About 1,200 pandas—80 percent of the surviving wild population in
China—live in several mountainous areas of Sichuan. The
earthquake, China's deadliest since 1976, occurred in an area with
numerous fault lines that have triggered destructive temblors before. A
magnitude 7.5 earthquake in Diexi, Sichuan that hit on August 25, 1933
killed more than 9,300 people. Xinhua said 50 bodies had been
pulled from the debris of the school building in Juyuan town but did
not say if the children were alive. Students also were buried under
five other toppled schools in Deyang city, Xinhua reported.
Its reporters saw buried teenagers struggling to break loose from
underneath the rubble of the three-story building in Juyuan "while
others were crying out for help." Two girls were quoted by Xinhua as
saying they escaped because they had "run faster than others."
Photos showed heavy cranes trying to remove rubble from the ruined
school. Other photos posted on the Internet and found on the Chinese search engine
Baidu showed arms and a torso sticking out of the rubble of the school
as dozens of people worked to free them, using their hands to move
concrete slabs. Calls into the city did not go through as
panicked residents quickly overloaded the telephone system and the
quake also affected power networks. Although it was difficult
to telephone Chengdu, an Israeli student, Ronen Medzini, sent a text
message to The Associated Press saying there were power and water
outages there. "Traffic jams, no running water, power outs,
everyone sitting in the streets, patients evacuated from hospitals
sitting outside and waiting," he said. The road to Wenchuan from Chendu was cut off by landslides, state media said, slowing the rescue efforts.
Though news trickled out in the first hours after the quake, the
government and its media quickly mobilized, with nearly 8,000 soldiers
and police sent to the area. China Central Television ran non-stop
coverage, with phone reports from reporters and a few isolated camera
shots from the scene. Disasters always pose a test to the
communist government, whose mandate in part rests on providing relief
to those in need. In recent years, the government has improved
emergency planning and rapid response training for the military.
The earthquake also rattled buildings in Beijing, some 930 miles to the
north, less than three months before the Chinese capital was expected
to be full of hundreds of thousands of foreign visitors for the Summer
Olympics. Li Jiulin, a top engineer on the 91,000-seat
National Stadium—known as the Bird's Nest and the jewel of the
Olympics—was conducting an inspection at the venue when the quake
occurred. He told reporters the building was designed to withstand a
8.0 quake. "The Olympic venues were not affected by the earthquake," said Sun Weide, a spokesman for the Beijing organizing committee.
Skyscrapers swayed in Shanghai and in the Taiwanese capital of Taipei,
100 miles off the southeastern Chinese coast. There were no immediate
reports of injuries or damage. The quake was felt as far away
as the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi, where some people hurried out of
swaying office buildings and into the streets downtown. A building in
the Thai capital of Bangkok also was evacuated after the quake was felt
there. A magnitude 7.8 earthquake is considered a major event, capable of causing widespread damage and injuries in populated areas.
The last serious earthquake in China was in 2003, when a 6.8-magnitude
quake killed 268 people in Bachu county in the west of Xinjiang.
China's deadliest earthquake in modern history struck the northeastern
city of Tangshan on July 28, 1976, killing 240,000 people.
One of the worst earthquakes in decades
struck central China on Monday, killing nearly 9,000 people, trapping
about 900 students under the rubble of their school and causing a toxic
chemical leak, state media reported.

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