Shanghai Daily

Classes resume at temporary schools in quake-hit Jishishan

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AFTER getting dressed and packing her school bag, Fan Yumiao was ready to wave goodbye to her parents in a makeshift house by 8am yesterday.

“I’m finally off to school today,” said the 11-year-old.

After about a 10-minute walk, she arrived at a temporary tent school set up in a shelter in Shiyuan Township, northwest China’s Gansu Province.

A week ago, at midnight, a 6.2-magnitude earthquake rocked her home in the Bonan-Dongxiang-Salar Autonomous County of Jishishan in Linxia Hui Autonomous Prefecture, causing hundreds of casualties. Strong tremors were felt throughout the region, leveling buildings and destroying infrastruc­ture, forcing many like Fan’s family to move into makeshift shelters erected by local authoritie­s to house displaced residents.

Timely and swift relief measures were soon in place, with efforts to treat injured people, restore disrupted transporta­tion and guarantee sufficient supply of necessitie­s.

Like Fan, students at nearly 200 temporary schools in Jishishan resumed classes yesterday.

Fan’s new classroom, though tiny, had drawn more than 30 students. It was equipped with computers, a blackboard and access to the internet, while heating facilities were installed to counter the minus 10-degree Celsius outdoor cold.

Their first lesson featured instructio­ns on how to respond to an earthquake. “We conduct emergency drills for disasters such as earthquake­s regularly at school,” said Fan, adding that such lessons had proved useful in enabling her and her family to survive the recent quake.

According to Ma Yonghong, deputy director of the education bureau in

Jishishan, multiple drills have been organized by the department since the fall semester of 2019 to improve disaster cognition and response, covering more than 60,000 students in over 240 schools.

Within about five minutes after the quake hit, over 14,000 students at all 13 local boarding schools had been evacuated in a safe and orderly manner.

The tent school Fan attends will only be used for one day. “New prefabrica­ted houses have been built, and the students can have classes in warmer and brighter rooms tomorrow,” said Zhang Qianqi, a dean at the school.

Zhang said the earthquake had caused three school buildings to crack, and a restoratio­n project will be launched during the winter vacation. “We hope the project will be finished before the students get back to school after the holiday.”

(Xinhua)

 ?? ?? A teacher gives a class at a temporary classroom inside a tent in Jishishan County, northweste­rn Gansu Province, yesterday. — Xinhua
A teacher gives a class at a temporary classroom inside a tent in Jishishan County, northweste­rn Gansu Province, yesterday. — Xinhua

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