China's economic hub of Shanghai has begun building a system of
public earthquake shelters.
The municipal government will also establish an earthquake
rescue team by the end of the year to provide first aid for the
seriously injured and relief for people affected by possible
disasters.
The shelter scheme was revealed at a commemoration ceremony on
Wednesday to mark the 30th anniversary of the Tangshan earthquake,
which claimed 240,000 lives when it shook the northern industrial
city in Hebei Province with 1.3 million people on July
28, 1976.
The first shelter is under construction in a park on Dalian
Road, an official with the local seismological bureau said.
It is expected to be completed next year and more shelters will
be constructed later to serve the city's 17.78 million people, said
the official.
The shelter is being built above ground among trees and
rockeries and away from tall buildings. In an emergency, it would
have independent water and electricity supply systems, wireless
telecommunications, blankets and tents.
It is still unclear how many people the building would be able
to accommodate.
The lack of earthquake planning in buildings contributed to the
great destruction of the Tangshan quake, which measured 7.8 on the
Richter scale, said Zhang Jun, head of the Shanghai seismological
Bureau.
Zhang said Shanghai would include quake-proof design in city
planning and enhance supervision.
Shanghai is far from the earthquake belt along the Pacific rim
in the east and more than 400 kilometers from the nearest onshore
quake-prone areas in the west. However, it could be affected by
strong and medium-scale earthquakes in nearby areas, said
Zhang.
More than 10 earthquakes have occurred around Shanghai since
1970.
The municipal government has set up a digital earthquake
monitoring network and China's first fixed, permanent and broadband
earthquake monitoring system.
(Xinhua News Agency July 28, 2006)