
Soldiers rushed to shore up a dam cracked by this week's powerful
earthquake, and rescuers came by helicopter and ship Wednesday into the
isolated epicenter but still were forced to dig for survivors with
their bare hands.
Nearly 26,000 people remained buried in collapsed buildings from
Monday's magnitude 7.9 earthquake, and the death toll of almost 15,000
was expected to climb as relief operations spread into the mountains of
Sichuan province. The quake triggered landslides that blocked roads to
hardest-hit areas.
Even as the rescue effort seemed to gather momentum — speeded by
clearing weather after two days of rain — caring for tens of thousands
of people made homeless across the disaster zone have stretched thin
the government's resources.
Homeless victims begged for aid on roadsides, and people settled in
for a third night in a growing sprawl of refugee camps littered with
garbage. In Hanwang, a town in one of the hardest-hit counties,
survivors stood hoping for handouts from cars, jostling with each other
to reach to one vehicle where a passenger passed bottled water out the
window.
"I'm numb," said Zhao Xiaoli, a 25-year-old nurse working at a
makeshift triage center in tire factory driveway. "The first day,
hundreds of kids died when a school collapsed. The rest who came in had
serious injuries. There was so little we could do for them."
Damage to the two-year-old Zipingpu Dam threatened downstream
communities still digging out from the quake. Some 2,000 soldiers were
sent to the dam, the official Xinhua News Agency
said. Four-inch cracks scarred the top of the dam, and landslides had
poured down the surrounding hills, the business news magazine Caijing
said on its Web site in a report from the scene.
Although the government pronounced the dam safe late Tuesday after
an inspection, Caijing said its waters were being emptied to relieve
pressure. The Ministry of Water Resources issued a notice to check
reservoirs nationwide, while the economic planning agency said nearly
400 dams, most of them small, were damaged by the quake.
Hundreds of rivers snake through the mountainous Tibetan plateau
before descending into the fertile Sichuan basin where they provide
critical irrigation.
The activist group International Rivers Network was involved in a
campaign in 2001 and 2002 to protest funding for the Zipingpu Dam
because of its proximity to a fault line, said Aviva Imhoff, the
group's campaigns director.
Imhoff said the group obtained transcripts of a 2000 internal
government meeting in which seismologists warned officials of the
dangers of constructing the dam and the potential for it to be damaged
in an earthquake, Imhoff said.
The massive Three Gorges dam, the world's largest, is about 350 miles east of the epicenter, wasn't damaged, officials said.
The official death toll rose Wednesday to 14,866, and in Sichuan
province another 25,788 people were buried and 1,405 were missing,
provincial vice governor Li Chengyun said, according to Xinhua.
An already massive military operation gathered pace with close to
100,000 soldiers and police mobilized. After two days of rain that
prevented relief flights, army helicopters flew 90 sorties to the
epicenter in Wenchuan county and other areas to drop food, medicine and tents and ferry out 156 injured people, Xinhua reported.
But on Thursday, the Defense Ministry ordered 100 more helicopters
into areas of Sichuan, underscoring worries that deaths will skyrocket
unless help for the needy arrives soon, Xinhua said.
The central government said it had allocated another $36 million for
aid, bringing total disaster spending to $159 million. Public donations
reached $125 million.
Aerial TV footage showed rows of small buildings flattened in
Yingxiu in Wenchuan county, where rescuers who hiked in said they found
only 2,300 survivors in the town of about 10,000, with another 1,000
badly hurt, Xinhua reported.
The agency reported Thursday that aftershocks in Yingxiu had collapsed some of the remaining buildings and set off landslides.
The scale of the devastation is raising questions about the quality of China's
recent construction boom. Some builders cut corners, especially in
outlying areas largely populated by the very young and very old.
With help slow in arriving, some fled Yingxiu on foot, carrying
injured family members in wheelbarrows. One woman "carried a dead
infant wrapped in white clothes as if the baby was alive," the agency
said, citing a reporter who hiked to the area with military rescue
teams.
Ships from a temporary dock built at a reservoir sailed to
Yingxiu, but blocked roads meant heavy digging equipment could not be
brought in. Most rescuers were using their hands, Xinhua reported.
The death toll from the quake was expected to rise when rescuers reach other towns in Wenchuan county that are still cut off.
"The Communist Party Central Committee has not forgotten this place," Premier Wen Jiabao said after flying by helicopter to Wenchuan.
President Hu Jintao
presided at an emergency meeting of the party's powerful Politburo,
urging the military, police and others to redouble rescue and relief
efforts.
Unlike previous natural disasters in China, official media have
reported prominently on the quake, and state TV replaced regular
programming with 24-hour coverage.
Scenes of destruction and death have been shown with a
prominent focus on Wen, the normally staid leadership's most popular
member who has been shown crawling into collapsed buildings to urge
survivors to hang on with impassioned pleas and reassuring children who
lost parents.
Amid the tragedy, onlookers erupted into cheers and applause
when a 34-year-old woman who was eight months pregnant was rescued
after spending 50 hours under debris in the Dujiangyan area.
"It's a miracle brought about by us all working together," said Sun Guoli, fire chief of the nearby provincial capital, Chengdu, who supervised the rescue.
Reinforcing the need for the helicopters, Xinhua said Thursday
that three mountainous towns north of Chengdu were still cut off. It
said 20,000 residents trapped in the towns of Qingping, Jinhua and
Tianchi, but the number of casualties was not known.
In Hanwang, the smell of incense hung over a crowd of sobbing
relatives who walked among some 60 bodies wrapped in plastic, some
covered with tributes of branches or flowers. Nearby, rescuers carried
more bodies out of a makeshift morgue at the Dongqi sports arena.
People from the town and surrounding areas packed into blue
tents provided by relief officials. Though the mostly older buildings
in the town collapsed, a newer Western-style clock tower still stood,
its hands stopped at 2:27 — the time the quake hit.
The Mianzhu No. 3 Hospital was obliterated, and the seven-story
main Hanwang Hospital collapsed. Surviving medical staff set up the
triage center in the tire factory driveway, but could only provide
basic care.
Farther north in An Xian, disaster victims huddled by the road
in front of their destroyed homes under a makeshift wood-and-plastic
shelter. Government buses have brought some survivors from devastated
areas, but 38-year-old farmer Li Zizhong said he had not heard from his
relatives there yet.
"Who knows what happened to them?" Li said. "All we need is a little something to eat. I'm just happy to be alive."
In Chengdu, water to some parts of the city was cut for repairs,
touching off a rumor that the supply was contaminated. People began
hoarding water, and water pressure citywide dropped before a senior
official went on TV to deny anything was wrong.
The disaster also cast a pall over the Olympic torch relay
that resumed Wednesday in eastern Fujian province away from the quake's
reach, pausing for a minute of silence before the event building up to
the Beijing Summer Games in August.
Air China was sending planes for stranded tourists in Sichuan, China's mission at the U.N. in New York said.