China Daily

Rescue teams race to help after Yunnan earthquake

- By LI YINGQING and ZHANG XIAOMIN Contact the writers at liyingqing@chinadaily.com.cn

Rescue teams and necessary supplies were rushed to the epicenter of Zhaotong in Yunnan province to support residents after a magnitude-5 earthquake jolted the city late on Monday, leaving four dead and 28 injured by 6 pm on Tuesday, the province’s emergency authoritie­s said.

Facilities damaged in the earthquake have been repaired to reduce the effect on residents. Five of the 10 communicat­ion base stations that were out of service after the earthquake have been repaired and restored as of 2 pm on Tuesday, according to the Department of Emergency Management of Yunnan province.

In addition, the Zhaotong city government has allocated emergency materials, including 750 relief tents, 2,500 quilts and 25 metric tons of rice to the epicenter, Xiaohe town of Qiaojia county. The earthquake relief work is being carried out in an orderly manner, the department said.

A batch of experts and rescue teams from the central and provincial government­s have been dispatched to supervise and lead the rescue and relief work, including conducting thorough examinatio­ns of the damaged houses.

The quake struck at 9:47 pm on Monday at a depth of 8 kilometers, according to the China Earthquake Networks Center.

“I have never felt any earthquake fiercer than this one. People couldn’t stand steadily on the ground,” said Liu Xiangfu, a 67-year-old villager in Xiaohe.

Because of the hot weather, many residents were still out enjoying the cool temperatur­e on Monday evening when the quake struck.

“It was really horrible to see the buildings shaking fiercely,” he said.

As of 7 am on Tuesday, more than 750 rescue workers from local emergency response department­s have been mobilized to help with mass relocation, rescue and disaster verificati­on.

“The earthquake caused the collapse of the road at Baiyanjiao, blocking traffic, but the road maintenanc­e group repaired it within one hour,” Liu said, giving thumbs up to department­s of all levels for responding positively to the disaster.

The earthquake caused some houses to crack or collapse, blocked traffic and interrupte­d power and communicat­ion in Xiaohe and Xindian towns of Qiaojia.

On Tuesday, Su Jianhong, vicemayor of Zhaotong, arranged rescue teams and livelihood support groups to aid relief work in 14 villages or communitie­s in Xiaohe.

Yunnan, one of the provinces where earthquake­s occur most frequently in China, also received assistance from technology.

An earthquake warning network jointly establishe­d by Chengdubas­ed Institute of Care-Life and local emergency management department­s was reported to have successful­ly sent warnings 69 seconds ahead of time to Kunming and 10 seconds early to Zhaotong.

It displayed a pop-up on TV screens to warn that the seismic wave would arrive soon.

“The earthquake warning network has covered Yunnan province since 2014. It helps to better meet the public’s demand for earthquake warnings after having launched the earthquake warning function on TVs and mobile phones,” Wang Tun, head of the ICL, told chinanews.com.

 ?? YAN KEREN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A person injured in the earthquake is sent to hospital in Qiaojia county of Zhaotong city, Yunnan province, on Tuesday.
YAN KEREN / FOR CHINA DAILY A person injured in the earthquake is sent to hospital in Qiaojia county of Zhaotong city, Yunnan province, on Tuesday.
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CHINA DAILY

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