Relief efforts are in full swing in Southwest China's Yunnan Province where
22 people were killed and more than 100 injured after an earthquake struck on
Saturday.
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Workers try to restore railway tracks damaged by earthquake
in Yanjing County, Southwest China's Yunnan Province on July 23,
2006. [Xinhua] |
About 6,000 homes reportedly collapsed in the quake which measured 5.1 on the
Richter scale that hit Yanjin County in Zhaotong City at 9:10 am.
The county was returning to normal yesterday afternoon, with power supply and
train services largely restored.
"Most victims were killed by collapsing homes and falling rocks," Li
Jiangren, deputy director of the publicity department of the Yanjin county
government, told China Daily on the phone. "Of the injured, eight are in serious
condition in county hospitals."
At least five aftershocks measuring 2 on the Richter scale rattled the area
yesterday, Beijing News said.
Apart from the 6,000 buildings destroyed in the affected area, more than
9,000 buildings are in danger of collapse and 38,000 were damaged by the quake,
which shook 13 townships in the region. The epicentre was about 90 kilometres
from Yunnan's Zhaotong city, Xinhua news agency said.
Houses in Yanjin, situated in the Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau with a population of
350,000, were mostly built on land vulnerable to earthquakes, Xinhua said,
citing seismological experts.
Chen Li, who was working on an expressway construction site when the temblor
hit, told China Daily on the phone: "We heard a big sound like thunder or
fireworks. Then rocks fell from the hills and houses were shaking. It all
happened in four or five seconds. Then someone shouted 'earthquake.' People ran
out of buildings and went to the streets."
But by yesterday, power supply in the disaster areas was mostly restored,
making rescue efforts easier, said Tian Rongping, administrative director of the
Zhaotong municipal government.
The Neijiang-Kunming railway, a major railway line linking Yunnan to Guizhou,
Sichuan and Chongqing municipality, resumed service yesterday morning, Liu
Zhenfang, deputy director of the Kunming Railway Bureau, was quoted as saying by
Xinhua.
Relief materials have reached the affected areas; and tents, quilts and
blankets have been sent to the quake-hit areas along with food and water, Li,
the local official, said.
More than 50,000 affected residents were moved to safe
places by yesterday afternoon, said Wu Yongfei, vice-mayor of Zhaotong.