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home/ap news/ap news 05.15/

 

State TV: China quake death toll could rise to 50K


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The official Chinese news agency Xinhua shows an aerial view Wednesday of the badly stricken town of Yingxiu in Wenchuan County of southwest China's Sichuan province, two days after a massive earthquake.

AP PHOTO | CHEN KAI

LUOSHUI TOWN, China — China warned the death toll from this week’s earthquake could soar to 50,000, while the government issued a rare public appeal today for rescue equipment as it struggled to cope with the disaster.

More than 72 hours after the quake rattled central China, rescuers appeared to shift from poring through downed buildings for survivors to the grim duty of searching for bodies — with 10 million directly affected by Monday’s temblor.

The confirmed death toll reached 19,509, up from the nearly 15,000 confirmed dead the day before, according to the Earthquake and Disaster Relief Headquarters of the State Council, the country’s Cabinet. The council said deaths could rise to some 50,000, state TV reported.

In Luoshui town — on the road to an industrial zone in Shifang city where two chemical plants collapsed, burying hundreds of people — troops used a mechanical shovel to dig a pit on a hilltop to bury the dead.

Police and militia in Dujiangyan pulverized rubble with cranes and backhoes while crews used shovels to pick around larger pieces of debris. On one sidestreet, about a dozen bodies were laid on a sidewalk, while incense sticks placed in a pile of sand sent smoke into the air as a tribute and to dull the stench of death.

The bodies were later lifted onto a flatbed truck, joining some half-dozen corpses. Ambulances sped past, sirens wailing, filled with survivors. Workers asked those left homeless to sign up for temporary housing, although it was unclear where they would live.

Not all hope of finding survivors was lost. After more than three days trapped under debris, a 22-year-old woman was pulled to safety in Dujiangyan. Covered in dust and peering out through a small opening, she was shown waving on state television shortly before being rescued.

“I was confident that you were coming to rescue me. I’m alive. I’m so happy,” the unnamed woman said on CCTV.

One earthquake expert said the time for rescues was growing short.

“Within 72 hours after the disaster is the critical period. Generally, the sooner the rescue of the buried, the better,” the chief engineer of Shijiazhuang Bureau of Seismology, Liang Guiping, told state TV.

 

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