Three people have been confirmed dead, and at least 300 injured
after a strong earthquake measuring 6.4 on the Richter scale struck
southwest China's Yunnan Province on Sunday.
The dead included a four-year-old boy, who was sleeping with his
mother when the earth-built walls of their house collapsed in the
quake and buried them. The mother was rescued but efforts to reach
the boy failed.
The quake shook the old downtown area of Ning'er at 5:34 AM,
with the epicenter at 23 degrees north and 101.1 degrees east,
according to the China Earthquake Administration.
Twenty seriously injured people have been transferred to the
city's hospitals.
"The house was shaking hard," said Zhu Shoukang, a 60-year-old
man in a residential area of the county. He was sleeping when the
quake occurred. He immediately hid himself under the bed and
managed to come out of the house during the intervals of the
quake.
Zhu said he dared not return to his house, as it had cracks
along its walls from the impact.
The quake, which affected 186,000 people in 35,000 households,
also forced the evacuation of 120,000 residents, said a spokesman
of the provincial civil affairs department. Many residents had
moved to public areas as their houses either collapsed or were
damaged.
The city's seismic bureau had recorded more than 300 aftershocks
by 3:30 PM. The strongest occurred at 10:49 AM with a magnitude of
5.1, centered at 23.02 degrees north and 101.06 degrees east.
Ning'er County, covering 3,670 square kilometers, has a
population of 190,000. It has reported over the years nine quakes
measuring five or above on the Richter scale, with the strongest
being a 6.8 on March 15, 1979.
More than 70 mobile phone signal transmission stations were
severely damaged, and the county's power grid was also running on
reduced capacity, while two mid-sized reservoirs were cracked.
Coal mines in Ning'er and surrounding areas were ordered to
suspend operations with all workers evacuated from pits, said Duan
Liyuan, head of the provincial work safety bureau.
The government of Pu'er City has allocated 1 million yuan for
emergency relief. The provincial civil affairs department is
sending 2,000 tents, 2,000 quilts and 2,000 items of clothes to the
stricken area.
The Ministry of Civil Affairs has sent a working group to the
area and allotted 5,000 tents from neighboring Guangxi Zhuang
Autonomous Region.
The China Red Cross Society and its Yunnan branch have sent the
first batch of relief supplies worth 500,000 yuan (US$65,000),
including tents, quilts, food and medicines.
Pu'er City is prone to strong earthquakes, having experienced 20
above a magnitude of five since 1990. The city, with a population
of 2.6 million, borders Vietnam, Laos and Myanmar and covers 45,000
square kilometers.
Residents in Lincang City, about 200 kilometers from the
epicenter, and Dai Autonomous Prefecture of Xishuangbanna, 300
kilometers from the center, also felt the tremor, but damage and
casualty reports are not available.
Rescue officials from the China Earthquake Administration have
been dispatched to help local rescue efforts.
The Yunnan government will budget 3 billion yuan for an
anti-earthquake project that will benefit one million poor families
living in unsafe houses within 10 years. Every household can get
3,000 to 5,000 yuan of subsidies for restoration.
The government sets a goal of making all rural residents' houses
solid enough to resist earthquakes of 6.0 magnitude.
This year, the government invested 500 million yuan in the
project covering 166,000 households in 70 counties.
During the 2001-2006 period, Yunnan recorded 27 earthquakes of
at least five magnitude, causing 56 deaths, 2,123 injuries and
nearly 3.6 billion yuan of losses.
(Xinhua News Agency June 4, 2007)