Over 90 temporary houses and tents have been set up for local
residents displaced after the ground of their village started
sinking on December 29, 2006.
A boy looks out of a
tent following a cave-in at Haijie Village, Nuotong Township,
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, January 3, 2007.
257 locals have been evacuated from a village in southern
China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region after the
land gave way, which insiders have linked to an underground
cavern.
A local website reports the ground starting sinking last Friday
after the demolition of a tunnel in Chafuziran Village, and was
continuing as of this Wednesday with the lowest area reaching a
depth of 105 centimeters.
The village has been sealed off and residents are not allowed to
get in without permission. Many houses have either collapsed or are
leaning with cracks on their walls. No casualties have been
reported.
Over 90 temporary houses and tents have been set up and the
local government has delivered relief materials, including food and
bed quilts to help the displaced residents pull through the
winter.
Experts guess that the demolition of the section of tunnel
changed the structure of a huge underground cave, which then became
unable to support the ground surface. Construction has been
halted.
Some elderly villagers said a similar event took place in the
1940s, but that they didn't realize their houses were built on the
huge cave.
The construction team says they will provide compensation for
the destroyed homes.
(CRI January 5, 2007)