China eyes 3 years to rebuild quake zone

China says it will take up to three years to rebuild its earthquake zone as the death toll from the nation's worst disaster in a generation surpassed 55,000.

Izvor: AFP

Friday, 23.05.2008.

12:35

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China says it will take up to three years to rebuild its earthquake zone as the death toll from the nation's worst disaster in a generation surpassed 55,000. The government also warned that millions of survivors were at a growing risk of disease, but there was positive news with another dramatic survival story, this time an elderly couple who had been stranded for 11 days. China eyes 3 years to rebuild quake zone The May 12 earthquake, which measured 8.0 on the Richter scale, destroyed entire towns across an area the size of South Korea, and the death toll has climbed daily as authorities have gained a clearer picture of the devastation. A total of 55,740 have been confirmed dead, a rise of 4,500 from the day before, the government said, but that number was likely to soar much higher with another 24,960 people still missing. More than 5.47 million people were left homeless in southwestern Sichuan province -- or around one in five in the affected area -- with most now crammed into overflowing tents or stuck under tarpaulins. "Now is the peak season for disease outbreaks and the situation is extremely grim," Sichuan Vice Governor Li Chengyun told a news conference in Beijing. He said that people badly needed tents and medical supplies, especially antibiotics, although he noted no outbreaks of disease had yet been reported. China has made a global appeal for 3.3 million tents and ordered the construction within three months of one million simple homes made of light materials. But Li warned it would take much longer to rebuild communities, not to mention addressing the lasting psychological scars inflicted by an earthquake so powerful it was felt in Bangkok. "We aim to improve roads and infrastructure and build new villages, towns and cities within three years," the vice governor said. "The mountains were basically shaken loose by the earthquake, causing mud flows and landslides, making reconstruction much more difficult than the work before the earthquake." In the hills above Dujiangyan, about 50 kilometers (32 miles) from the quake's epicenter, people were working overtime to build pre-fabricated homes. "We need tents and shelter," said Song Guosu, 58, one of more than 100 people waiting in only rudimentary shelters as bulldozers moved across a muddy field nearby to clear land for makeshift shelters. Officials said that the government's top priority was rescuing anyone still trapped under the rubble 11 days after the quake. No one has been rescued from under the debris since Tuesday, although the state-run Xinhua news agency reported another improbable story of survival. An elderly couple, aged 92 and 84, had been trapped in their cottage on a mountaintop in a village near the top of Mount Qingcheng, a summit in Sichuan that is revered in the Taoist faith. A police team found the couple, Tian Yueqing and Cao Shuyun, on Thursday and carried them to the foot of the mountain on stretchers, Xinhua said. Such rescue stories have inspired the Chinese public, who this week observed an unprecedented three days of national mourning for the tragedy. The Beijing Olympic torch, which has been greeted enthusiastically across China after a protest-marred international leg, arrived Friday in the bustling financial hub Shanghai, but the mood was sombre. "We are here to support China," said Ren Fufu, a retiree attending the opening ceremony. "The torch must continue its journey because it shows our solidarity with the earthquake victims and the Beijing Olympics are a world event," she said. In a bid to tap into public sentiments and raise funds, the government plans to launch a national lottery for earthquake relief and rescue work, Civil Affairs Minister Li Xueju said, quoted by the state-run Beijing Times. The government has already ordered five percent cuts to this year's national budget to free up more than 13 billion-dollars for relief and reconstruction work. People from within China and abroad have responded to the call for help, with 24.6 billion yuan (3.5 billion dollars) collected in donations for relief and rescue work, the government said Friday. Authorities were also focusing on helping non-human victims. Six rare giant pandas were evacuated from the famed Wolong breeding centre due to food shortages and damage from the earthquake, staff said Friday.

China eyes 3 years to rebuild quake zone

The May 12 earthquake, which measured 8.0 on the Richter scale, destroyed entire towns across an area the size of South Korea, and the death toll has climbed daily as authorities have gained a clearer picture of the devastation.

A total of 55,740 have been confirmed dead, a rise of 4,500 from the day before, the government said, but that number was likely to soar much higher with another 24,960 people still missing.

More than 5.47 million people were left homeless in southwestern Sichuan province -- or around one in five in the affected area -- with most now crammed into overflowing tents or stuck under tarpaulins.

"Now is the peak season for disease outbreaks and the situation is extremely grim," Sichuan Vice Governor Li Chengyun told a news conference in Beijing.

He said that people badly needed tents and medical supplies, especially antibiotics, although he noted no outbreaks of disease had yet been reported.

China has made a global appeal for 3.3 million tents and ordered the construction within three months of one million simple homes made of light materials.

But Li warned it would take much longer to rebuild communities, not to mention addressing the lasting psychological scars inflicted by an earthquake so powerful it was felt in Bangkok.

"We aim to improve roads and infrastructure and build new villages, towns and cities within three years," the vice governor said.

"The mountains were basically shaken loose by the earthquake, causing mud flows and landslides, making reconstruction much more difficult than the work before the earthquake."

In the hills above Dujiangyan, about 50 kilometers (32 miles) from the quake's epicenter, people were working overtime to build pre-fabricated homes.

"We need tents and shelter," said Song Guosu, 58, one of more than 100 people waiting in only rudimentary shelters as bulldozers moved across a muddy field nearby to clear land for makeshift shelters.

Officials said that the government's top priority was rescuing anyone still trapped under the rubble 11 days after the quake.

No one has been rescued from under the debris since Tuesday, although the state-run Xinhua news agency reported another improbable story of survival.

An elderly couple, aged 92 and 84, had been trapped in their cottage on a mountaintop in a village near the top of Mount Qingcheng, a summit in Sichuan that is revered in the Taoist faith.

A police team found the couple, Tian Yueqing and Cao Shuyun, on Thursday and carried them to the foot of the mountain on stretchers, Xinhua said.

Such rescue stories have inspired the Chinese public, who this week observed an unprecedented three days of national mourning for the tragedy.

The Beijing Olympic torch, which has been greeted enthusiastically across China after a protest-marred international leg, arrived Friday in the bustling financial hub Shanghai, but the mood was sombre.

"We are here to support China," said Ren Fufu, a retiree attending the opening ceremony.

"The torch must continue its journey because it shows our solidarity with the earthquake victims and the Beijing Olympics are a world event," she said.

In a bid to tap into public sentiments and raise funds, the government plans to launch a national lottery for earthquake relief and rescue work, Civil Affairs Minister Li Xueju said, quoted by the state-run Beijing Times.

The government has already ordered five percent cuts to this year's national budget to free up more than 13 billion-dollars for relief and reconstruction work.

People from within China and abroad have responded to the call for help, with 24.6 billion yuan (3.5 billion dollars) collected in donations for relief and rescue work, the government said Friday.

Authorities were also focusing on helping non-human victims. Six rare giant pandas were evacuated from the famed Wolong breeding centre due to food shortages and damage from the earthquake, staff said Friday.

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