--- !signs/object:Article attributes: title: "China buries quake dead as new aftershock hits" source: News Daily author: John Ruwitch, Emma Graham-Harrison in Yingxiu, Jason Li in Houzhuang, Lucy Hornby, Benjamin Kang Lim and Guo Shipeng in Beijing and Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva summary: "BEICHUAN - China struggled to bury its dead and help tens of thousands of injured and homeless on Friday when a powerful aftershock brought new havoc four days after an earthquake thought to have killed more than 50,000. President Hu Jintao flew to the battered province of Sichuan and Premier Wen Jiabao said the quake damage could exceed the devastating 1976 tremor in the northeastern city of Tangshan that killed up to 300,000 people.
BUCKLED ROADS, LANDSLIDES The aftershock, measuring 5.9 on the Richter scale, hit Lixian, to the west of the epicenter in Wenchuan, cutting off newly repaired roads and telecommunications. "A number of vehicles were buried in landslides. The casualties were not known," Xinhua news agency said, adding four of its reporters narrowly escaped death when a house collapsed. China has mobilized 130,000 army and paramilitary troops to the disaster area, but with buckled and blocked roads, supplies and rescuers have struggled to reach the worst-hit areas. Offers of help have also flooded in. The first foreign rescue team, a group of about 60 people from Japan, reached Sichuan on Friday. Rescue teams from Russia, Taiwan, South Korea and Singapore have also arrived in the province. At China's request, the World Food Program said it was sending enough ready-to-eat meals for 118,000 people. Despite the growing death toll, rescuers were still finding survivors among the rubble. A 50-year-old worker was rescued from a collapsed fertilizer plant after being trapped for about 100 hours, a witness said. At least six people in Beichuan were rescued on Friday, including three school girls 87 hours after the tremor. Many raised questions about school construction. In Dujiangyan, a school collapse buried 900 students. In Wufu, nearly every building in the village withstood the quake but for a primary school, whose collapse killed about 300. "Our child wasn't killed by the earthquake. She and the others were killed by a derelict building. The officials knew it was unsafe," said Bi Kaiwei, whose daughter, 13, was killed. Rescuers found two girls, one in a coma and the other dead, holding hands in the ruins of their school, Xinhua said. Housing Minister Jiang Weixin said the schools weren't designed to withstand such a powerful earthquake, but added corruption was a possible cause. "At this stage we cannot rule out the possibility that there has been shoddy work and inferior materials," Jiang told a news conference in Beijing. There were also concerns about epidemics if the dead were not soon buried or cremated. "A lot of tourists have been killed. We don't know how to deal with the bodies, some of which have been highly decomposed, but their relatives will come to look for them," an army officer in the badly hit Yinmugou resort in Pengzhou told Sichuan TV. "I am really worried about epidemics," he said. Hundreds of damaged dams have also raised fears of collapse or flooding that could inundate towns and cities that are already struggling to recover from the quake. China has asked the United States for satellite images to help locate victims and identify damaged infrastructure. The Science and Technology minister also requested talks with U.S. experts on preventing disease, said U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Michael Leavitt. " comment: "" date: Fri May 16 14:38:00 -0400 2008 type: Article id: "156606" votes: "8" link: "http://www.newsdaily.com/stories/sp239734-quake/" classification_id: "4"