Houston Community News >> Strong Quake in China Kills 3
6/2/2007 BEIJING -- A strong
earthquake shook a hilly southwestern Chinese region near the border with Laos
early Sunday, killing at least three people - including a child who was crushed
by debris - injuring hundreds and forcing 120,000 people from their homes, state
media reported.
The 6.4-magnitude quake struck the county seat of Ning'er shortly after 5:30
a.m., said China's official Xinhua News Agency, citing the government's
seismological bureau. The U.S. Geological Survey measured the quake's magnitude
at 6.2.
At least three people died and more than 290 were injured, 15 seriously, Xinhua
reported. One of the dead was a 5-year-old boy who was crushed by debris, state
television reported. The boy's parents were also trapped but were rescued by
local residents, China Central Television said.
"I didn't notice the initial quake and was woken up by my parents, and we ran
out of our home," said a woman in her 20s who lives in Ning'er County and
refused to give her name when reached by phone.
She said the initial quake lasted about a minute and that many residents fled
their homes to find safety in open areas. Others moved into tents after their
homes were damaged, said a retired schoolteacher who only gave her surname,
Dong.
"Many old buildings, especially those built in the 1970s, either have cracks in
the walls or have collapsed," Dong told The Associated Press by phone.
News footage aired on China Central Television showed partly collapsed brick
homes and soldiers knocking down unstable structures. Doctors and nurses treated
the injured in a large tent. Rescue teams with thousands of tents, quilts and
other relief supplies were rushing to the area, Xinhua reported.
Ning'er lies in a quake-prone mountainous region in Yunnan province about 90
miles north of Laos and is famous for its strong tea, known as Pu'er. For
centuries, the area sat astride an important trade route for tea and horses that
ran along western China between central Asia and southeastern Asia.
Many of the area's residents belong to the Hani and Yi minority groups that once
thrived in small hillside villages but have in recent decades moved into the
county seat.
The quake damaged pipes, cutting off water supplies, and though electricity was
still on in some areas, shops and schools were closed, Dong said.
Xinhua said communications lines were also downed, making it difficult for
residents to make phone calls.
By 2 p.m., the local seismological bureau recorded 233 aftershocks, the
strongest with a magnitude of 5.1, said an official with the bureau who gave
only his surname, Ma.
The evacuation of 120,000 residents was ordered after many buildings were deemed
to be unsafe, Ma said. He said the seismological bureau was among many offices
and homes in the area where walls had cracked.
The quake could be felt as far as 185 miles away, Xinhua said.
Twenty temblors above magnitude 5.0 have hit the area since 1990, Xinhua said.
In 1988, a 7.1 magnitude quake in Yunnan near the border with Myanmar killed
more than 930 people. More than 15,000 people died after a magnitude-7.7
earthquake in the province in 1970, though authorities at the time covered up
information on casualties and damage amid the chaos of the Cultural Revolution.
(Contributed by AP)