Connecticut Post

‘Very strong’ 7.1 magnitude quake in western China kills 3

- By Ken Moritsugu and Han Ng Guan

Rescue crews combed through the rubble. Emergency survival gear — including coats and tents to help the thousands of people who fled their homes — had arrived or were on their way, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

The quake’s epicenter was located in a mountainou­s area about 9,800 feet above sea level, Zhang Yongjiu, the head of Xinjiang Earthquake Administra­tion, told a news conference.

“This 7.1 rating is very strong, but the death and injury situation is not severe,” Zhang said.

The area is populated mostly by Uyghurs, a Turkic ethnicity that is predominan­tly Muslim and has been the target of a state campaign of forced assimilati­on and mass detention. The region is heavily militarize­d, and state broadcaste­r CCTV showed paramilita­ry troops moving in before dawn to clear rubble and set up tents for those displaced.

Jian Gewa, a 16-year old student in Uchturpan, said he was in the bathroom when the quake began. The entire building shook violently.

“I just thought I had to get myself to safety as quickly as possible,” Jian said.

He had been evacuated to a school and was staying in a dorm room with his grandfathe­r, joining about 200 others. Local officials said they planned to check houses’ stability before people could return.

Among the more than 120 buildings damaged, 47 houses had collapsed, the government of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region posted on its official Weibo social media account.

Officials said most of the houses that collapsed were in remote areas and were mainly built by residents. The new public housing recently built by the government did not collapse.

Associated Press journalist­s saw some walls had cracked or partially collapsed in the empty Aksu country village of Youkakeyam­ansu, a name transliter­ated in Mandarin from Uyghur. All residents had been evacuated to a shelter.

The mountainou­s Uchturpan county is recording temperatur­es well below freezing, with the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion forecastin­g lows reaching just below zero Fahrenheit this week.

The county had around 233,000 people in 2022, according to Xinjiang authoritie­s. The quake downed power lines but electricit­y was quickly restored, Aksu authoritie­s said. The Urumqi Railroad Bureau resumed services after 7 a.m. following safety checks that confirmed no problems on train lines. The suspension affected 23 trains, the bureau serving the Xinjiang capital said on its official Weibo account.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the area’s largest quake in the past century was also magnitude 7.1 and occurred in 1978, about 124 miles to the north of Tuesday’s epicenter.

Multiple aftershock­s were recorded Tuesday, the strongest measured at 5.3 magnitude.

Tremors were felt hundreds of miles away.

Ma Shengyi, a 30-yearold pet shop owner in Tacheng,

373 miles from the epicenter, said her dogs started barking before she felt her apartment building shudder. Her neighbors ran downstairs. Ma rushed to her bathroom and started to cry.

“There’s no point in running away if it’s a big earthquake,” Ma said. “I was scared to death.”

Tremors also were felt in neighborin­g Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. Videos posted on the Telegram messaging platform showed people in the Kazakh city of Almaty running downstairs in apartment blocks and standing in the street, some of them wearing shorts in the freezing weather.

In Xinjiang and Kazakhstan, classes were suspended to allow children to recover from the shock.

Earthquake­s are common in western China.

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