Saturday, May 19, 2012
   
Text Size

Make Home Page     Register for FREE!     Advertise with Us    Add Story    Contact Us

Chinese Landslide Claims 700, More Feared

Over 700 people are dead in a massive landslide in north-west China – one of the deadliest incidents so far in the country's worst flooding in decades.

A frantic search is starting for more than 1,000 missing people.

Buildings were slammed with a wall of mud that buildings seven stories high crumpled like paper in Gansu province.

Rescuers are still searching by hand in the remote and mountainous area.

A man, 52, was pulled from the rubble still breathing after being trapped for 50 hours. Other rescue teams say thay have heard “very faint' signs of life.

Chinese premier Wen Jiabao has urged rescuers to keep looking until they find all of the survivors.

As time moves on, hopes of finding people alive dwindle.

"Around me are relatives of missing people sitting dazed, shocked. Each of them has stories," our correspondent says.

One woman has lost her husband and three teenage kids. She only believed it when she saw their bodies with her own eyes.

The death tolls have been revised since Tuesday at 337, and officials are expecting the number to keep growing.

The forecast for the coming days is heavy rain, which could stall out some humanitarian work, and there is the further possibility of more landslides.

The landslides in the remote Zhouqu county, Gansu, were sparked by heavy rains that hit the area late on Saturday.

The thick sludge levelled an area about 3 miles by 500m, Xinhua said.

The debris from the landslide blocked a river that then burst its banks, shooting water, rocks and mud down hillsides and into homes.

Soldiers have been bombing through the blockage on the Bailong river, taking the water level down of an unstable lake created by the landslide.

Thousands of people have been evacuated from towns and villages that could be engulfed if the damn breaks.

China had been struggling with its worst flooding in a decade when the landslide hit and more than 2,100 people have been reported dead or missing and millions are displaced.

President Hu Jintao led a meeting of senior ministers on Tuesday on ideas to handle the crisis, Xinhua news said.

Over 7,000 soldiers, medical staff and firefighters are now at the scene of the accident.

The Chinese premier has been to Zhouqu, pushing rescue workers on their efforts and comforting the affected.

Tents, food and water have been sent by authorities, but supplies are running low because roads and bridges in the area have been knocked out.

World News Headlines

  • Syria bomb kills 9, Damascus blames foreign plot

    Residents and security personnel gather at the site of an explosion in Deir Al-ZourBEIRUT (Reuters) - A car bomb killed nine people at a Syrian military post in the eastern city of Deir al-Zor on Saturday, an attack the government said was the latest proof that an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad was a foreign plot. The official SANA news agency said the blast had been the work of a suicide bomber, and had also wounded about 100 people, including guards, at what it called military installations. International pressure and an U.N.-backed peace plan has failed to quell Syria's turmoil. ...


  • G8, raising pressure on Iran, puts oil stocks on standby

    Britain's Prime Minister Cameron listens as U.S. President Obama speaks during an expanded G8 working luncheon with African and other leaders at the G8 Summit at Camp DavidCAMP DAVID, Maryland (Reuters) - Leaders of the Group of Eight major economies raised the pressure on Iran on Saturday, signaling their readiness to tap into emergency oil stockpiles quickly this summer if tougher new sanctions on Tehran threaten to strain supplies. In unusually blunt language, the G8 put the International Energy Agency -- the West's energy advisor responsible for coordinating reserves -- on standby for action. It was the clearest sign yet that U.S. President Barack Obama is winning support for tapping government-held oil stocks for the second time in two years. ...


  • Chinese activist who fled house arrest heads to US

    Chinese activist Chen Guangcheng, in a wheelchair, is helped to head to a commercial flight Saturday, May 19, 2012 at Beijing International Airport in Beijing. Chen was hurriedly taken from a hospital Saturday and boarded a plane that took off for the United States, closing a nearly monthlong diplomatic tussle that had tested U.S.-China relations. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, HONG KONG, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA AND FRANCEA blind Chinese legal activist was hurriedly taken from a hospital and put on a plane for the United States on Saturday, closing a nearly monthlong diplomatic tussle that had tested U.S.-China relations.


 

© 2009 Homepage, Inc. All Rights Reserved.