Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Earthquake in northweste­rn China kills at least 127

Country’s deadliest trembler in 9 years

- By Ken Moritsugu

BEIJING — A strong overnight earthquake rattled a mountainou­s region of northweste­rn China, authoritie­s said Tuesday, destroying homes, leaving residents out in a below-freezing winter night and killing 127 people in the nation’s deadliest quake in nine years.

The magnitude 6.2 earthquake struck just before midnight on Monday, injuring more than 700 people, damaging roads and knocking out power and communicat­ion lines in Gansu and Qinghai provinces, officials and Chinese media reports said.

As emergency workers searched for the missing in collapsed buildings and at least one landslide, people who lost their homes were preparing to spend a cold winter night in tents at hastily erected evacuation sites.

“I just feel anxious, what other feelings could there be?” said Ma Dongdong, who said in a phone interview that three bedrooms in his house had been destroyed and a part of his milk tea shop was cracked wide open.

Afraid to return home because of aftershock­s, he spent the night in a field with his wife, two children and some neighbors, where they made a fire to stay warm. In the early morning, they went to a tent settlement that Mr. Ma said was housing about 700 people. As of mid-afternoon, they were waiting for blankets and warm clothing to arrive.

The earthquake struck at a relatively shallow depth of 6 miles in Gansu’s Jishishan county, about 3 miles from the provincial boundary with Qinghai, the China

Earthquake Networks Center said. The U.S. Geological Survey measured the magnitude at 5.9.

State broadcaste­r CCTV said 113 were confirmed dead in Gansu and another 536 injured in the province. Fourteen others were killed and 198 injured in Qinghai, in an area north of the epicenter, according to the People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s official mouthpiece.

There were nine aftershock­s measuring magnitude 3.0 or higher by 10 a.m. — about 10 hours after the initial earthquake — the largest one registerin­g a magnitude of 4.1, officials said.

Emergency authoritie­s in Gansu issued an appeal for 300 additional workers for search and rescue operations, and Qinghai officials reported 20 people missing in a landslide, according to Chinese state-owned media.

The earthquake was felt

in much of the surroundin­g area, including Lanzhou, the Gansu provincial capital, about 60 miles northeast of the epicenter. Photos and videos posted by a student at Lanzhou University showed students hastily leaving a dormitory building and standing outside with long down jackets over their pajamas.

“The earthquake was too intense,” said Wang Xi, the student who posted the images. “My legs went weak, especially when we ran downstairs from the dormitory.”

The death toll was the highest since an August 2014 quake that killed 617 people in southwest China’s Yunnan province. The country’s deadliest earthquake in recent years was a 7.9 magnitude quake in 2008 that left nearly 90,000 dead or presumed dead and devastated towns and schools in Sichuan province, leading to a yearslong effort to rebuild

with more resistant materials.

Li Haibing, an expert at the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, said that the relatively high number of casualties in the latest quake was in part because it was shallow. “Therefore, it has caused greater shaking and destructio­n, even though the magnitude was not large,” he said.

Other factors include the quake’s mainly vertical movement, which causes more violent shaking; the lower quality of buildings in what is a relatively poor area, and the fact that it happened in the middle of the night when most people were home, Li said.

The epicenter was about 800 miles southwest of Beijing, the Chinese capital. The remote and mountainou­s area is home to several predominan­tly Muslim ethnic groups and near some Tibetan communitie­s. Geographic­ally, it is in the center of China, though the area is commonly referred to as the northwest, as it is at the northweste­rn edge of China’s more populated plains.

Tents, folding beds and quilts were being sent to the disaster area, state broadcaste­r CCTV said. It quoted Chinese leader Xi Jinping as calling for an all-out search and rescue effort to minimize the casualties.

The overnight low in the area was minus 5 to 16 degrees Fahrenheit, the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion said. The Beijing Youth Daily, a Communist Party newspaper, quoted an unnamed rescue coordinato­r saying there was a need for generators, long coats and fuel for stoves, among other items. The coordinato­r recommende­d sending halal food because of the ethnic makeup of the affected population.

At least 4,000 firefighte­rs, soldiers and police officers were dispatched in the rescue effort, and the People’s Liberation Army Western Theatre set up a command post to direct its work.

 ?? Chinatopix via AP ?? Rescuers work on the rubble of a house that collapsed Tuesday in an earthquake in Kangdiao village of Jishishan county in northweste­rn China's Gansu province.
Chinatopix via AP Rescuers work on the rubble of a house that collapsed Tuesday in an earthquake in Kangdiao village of Jishishan county in northweste­rn China's Gansu province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States