China Aftershock Topples 71,000 Homes

Christopher Bodeen in Chengdu, China
Associated Press
May 26, 2008

A powerful aftershock destroyed tens of thousands of homes in central China on Sunday, killing six people and straining recovery efforts from the country's worst earthquake in three decades. More than 500 others were injured.

Meanwhile, soldiers rushed with explosives to unblock a debris-clogged river threatening to flood homeless quake survivors.

The fresh devastation came after a magnitude 6 aftershock, the strongest recorded since the initial May 12 earthquake, according to the China National Seismic Network.

The new tremor killed two people in Sichuan Province and injured more than 480 others, 41 seriously, the official Xinhua News Agency said. Four people died and 20 others were injured seriously in neighboring Shaanxi province.

Some 71,000 homes that had survived the original quake were leveled, and another 200,000 were in danger of collapse from the aftershock that caused office towers to sway in Beijing, 800 miles (1,287 kilometers) away.

Xinhua did not give any details on whether the houses were occupied.

Before the aftershock, the Chinese Cabinet said the confirmed death toll from the disaster had risen to 62,664, with another 23,775 people missing. Premier Wen Jiabao has warned the number of dead could surpass 80,000.

(See photos of the quake's destruction.)

Flooding Danger

A mudslide caused by the aftershock blocked a road, but Xinhua said no serious landslides were reported.

Previous landslides loosened by the quake jammed rivers across the disaster area, creating 35 new lakes that placed 700,000 survivors in jeopardy of floods, Vice Minister of Water Resources E Jingping told reporters in Beijing.

The biggest concern was the new Tangjiashan lake in Beichuan county, where some 1,800 police and soldiers hiked with explosives each to blast through debris, according to Xinhua.

Continued on Next Page >>


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