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China quake rescue operations face rising toll, strained public
services
By Alex Lantier
17 May 2008
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The official casualty toll from the massive May 12 earthquake
in Chinas Sichuan province continues to rise, amid growing
public anger and signs that rescue efforts are swamping the regions
underdeveloped public infrastructure.
According to state wire service Xinhua, the official death
toll rose to 22,069 yesterday, with 21,577 in Sichuan and the
remainder in nearby provinces or autonomous zones: 364 in Gansu,
109 in Shaanxi, 15 in Chongqing, 2 in Henan, 1 in Yunnan, and
1 in Hubei. A rescue headquarters directed by the State Council
and headed by Premier Wen Jiabao estimated yesterday that the
death toll would probably exceed 50,000.
There were 168,669 wounded, including 159,006 in Sichuan. Xinhua
also reported that at least 14,000 people remained buried under
collapsed buildings and debris as of yesterday. For any who have
survived trapped under the rubble without food or water, time
is fast running out.
Rescue efforts are often proceeding with hand tools for lack
of heavy machinery, which in any case cannot reach many of the
worst-hit areas due to narrow mountain roads being blocked by
landslides. Paratroopers are being dropped into some of these
accessible regions.
Sichuan province Vice-Governor Li Chengyun also told a news
conference that 4,807,200 people had been made homeless in the
province6 percent of Sichuans population. The Ministry
of Civil Affairs told Xinhua that 181,470 tents, 170,000 cotton-padded
clothes, and 220,000 quilts had been allocated to the disaster
area.
Smaller earthquakes continue to shake the area. A tremor in
Sichuans Lixian County registered 5.9 on the Richter scale
yesterday, caused further landslides, building collapses, and
road blockages, and reduced telecommunications by knocking out
more cell phone transmission towers.
There are also flooding concerns over the rivers flowing eastward
from the mountains of western Sichuan, towards the Sichuan Basin
in the central and eastern parts of the province. According to
state officials, the quake damaged at least 391 dams and some
are in danger of bursting.
The Water Resources Ministry said that the major Zipingpu Dam
was in a more stable condition than on May 14, when soldiers were
rushed to bolster the dam amid reports that it was developing
cracks 10cm wide and that it risked flooding Dujiangyan, a city
of 630,000 people. The dam was built from 2000 to 2006, over the
objections of seismologists concerned about Zipingpus proximity
to major geological faults. Its hydropower generating plantan
important reason behind the Chinese Communists Partys
support for the dam projecthas reportedly fallen into the
dams reservoir.
Landslides also have blocked the flow of two rivers in Qingchuan
county, causing a huge lake to form. Local officials are warning
that the build-up of water could eventually burst through the
landslides, causing a flood. Li Hao, the countys Communist
Party chief, told Xinhua: The rising water could cause the
mountains to collapse. We desperately need geological experts
to carry out tests and fix a rescue plan.
Accounts of rescue efforts underscore the regions poverty
and the fragility of its underfunded infrastructure.
The Chinese government has been forced to make public appeals
for private donations of all types of rescue equipmentfrom
hammers and shovels to rubber boats, demolition tools, and cranes.
Medical care is in large part being dispensed in tents, because
many hospitals in the region have been badly damaged or have completely
collapsed. Medical equipment is scarce, with Red Cross Society
of China doctor Wu Tianfu telling the press: What do we
need? We just need some rest. Then we need gloves, masks, iodine,
sutures, cold medicine. Its a long list.
The problems are compounded by the serious nature of the injuries,
and the delay in extracting many of the victims from collapsed
buildings. Nurse Zhao Xiaoli said: Im numb. 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.
Disinfectants are reportedly in very short supply, and authorities
are concerned about the possibility of epidemics. This is compounded
by the large number of corpses, which are currently being buried
wrapped in plastic, in the hopes of stopping the spread of disease.
Deputy Health Minister Gao Qing told reporters, We will
try to achieve the goal of no big epidemic after a great disaster,
quickly adding, However, whether we achieve the goal ...
will depend on the real work we do in those areas.
In a separate interview on May 15, Gao confessed: The
public health care system in China is insufficient. How we are
going to solve the medical expense this time will be an issue.
The government should be responsible for providing medical treatment
to [earthquake victims].
The lack of health-care coverage stems directly from the Chinese
Communist Partys pro-capitalist policy. Rural health-care
facilities collapsed in the wake of the 1979 reforms, led by Deng
Xiaoping, opening China to global investment. The initial reforms
moved towards creating a free market in land by dissolving village
communes, which had amongst other duties organized rural health
care. In 1984, only 40 to 45 percent of the population was covered
by a cooperative medical system, as opposed to over 80 percent
in 1979.
While the situation has improved somewhat since, with the opening
of fee-based hospitals, large masses of rural people are still
not covered. The British Economistwhich vigorously
supported the free-market reformsnoted in December 2007:
The biggest beneficiaries are the richest peasants. The
poorest are just as likely to choose to die at home rather than
risk deeper impoverishment of their families by venturing into
hospital. The measures also do next to nothing for a huge section
of the rural population that has moved to the cities in recent
years. The rural migrant labor force is estimated at roughly
150 million people in China.
A particularly heart-wrenching aspect of the tragedy has been
Sichuans schools, many of which collapsed while full of
students. Han Jin, head of the planning and development department
of the Ministry of Education, told Xinhua that 216,000 structures
in the province had collapsed, including 6,898 school buildings.
This contrasts sharply with offices and facilities of major multinationals
such as Toyota, Intel, and Yamahawhich survived with minor
damage.
For the time being, no final death toll of teachers and students
has been announced. However, international media are carrying
devastating reports of schoolchildren dying, buried under the
rubble, within earshot of their parents, or of traumatized children
who will not speak after undergoing multiple amputations.
Han announced: If quality problems do exist in the school
buildings, we will deal with the persons responsible strictly
with no toleration and give the public a satisfying answer.
However, it is widely known that Chinas building codes do
not address an earthquake of this intensity, and that contractors
routinely flout these building codes in an effort to maximize
profits. People have come to calling these constructions tofu
buildingsafter soybean curd, which is often made in a rectangular
shape but is easily crushed.
See Also:
As death toll climbs, Chinese earthquake
exposes deep social divide
[15 May 2008]
Death toll, economic consequences mount
from China earthquake
[14 May 2008]
Massive earthquake in China kills at
least 10,000
[13 May 2008]
Why the propaganda campaign for international
intervention in Burma?
[10 May 2008]
Chinese leaders react nervously
to ongoing "snow havoc"
[8 February 2008]
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