The Asian Age

China’s deadliest quake in 9 years claims 127 lives

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Dahejia, Dec. 19: Rescuers in remote villages of northwest China dug through the rubble of collapsed homes in freezing conditions on Tuesday after the country’s deadliest earthquake in years killed at least 127 people.

State media said the shallow tremor just before midnight had caused the deaths of at least 113 and injured more than 530 in impoverish­ed Gansu province, as of Tuesday.

A further 14 died and 198 were injured in Haidong in neighbouri­ng Qinghai province.

The quake damaged more than 1,55,000 buildings, according to state broadcaste­r CCTV, and sent residents running into the freezing streets for safety. At a village near the epicentre, AFP reporters saw huge cracks running through the exterior and interior walls of a brick home, and the roof of a building that had caved in completely.

“I am 70 and I have never experience­d such a powerful quake in my life,” resident Ma Wenchang told AFP.

“I can’t live (in this house) anymore because it’s too dangerous. My relatives have been relocated somewhere else.” At another location, the top of a mosque had collapsed askew, and another building

was reduced to mere rubble. The roads were full of emergency vehicles, and the AFP team saw trucks covered in red banners reading “earthquake relief supplies”.

As evening fell, volunteers scrambled to set up tents in a town square to make a base for rescuers.

Two dozen military trucks were parked nearby.

“The most urgent task for us is to make things ready quickly as temperatur­es will reach -17 (degrees Celsius) tonight,” a volunteer told AFP.

The quake was China's deadliest since 2014, when more than 600 people died in Yunnan province. China’s western hinterland carries the scars of seismic activity, and a quake in Sichuan province in 2008 left more than 87,000 people dead.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman shows the damage to her home after an earthquake in Dahejia, in China’s Gansu province on Tuesday. —
AFP A woman shows the damage to her home after an earthquake in Dahejia, in China’s Gansu province on Tuesday. —

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