Special Report:
30th anniversary of Tangshan
earthquake
TANGSHAN, Hebei, July 28 (Xinhua) -- More than 1,000
people took part in commemoration activities Friday morning in Tangshan,
northern Hebei Province, to mark the 30th anniversary of the terrible earthquake
which killed more than 240,000 people there.
At 8:30 a.m. Friday people from all walks of life
headed by BaiKeming, secretary of the Hebei Provincial Committee of the
Communist Party of China (CPC), gathered at a square in downtown Tangshan to lay
flowers at the monument to citizens and rescuers who died in the tragedy.
"Thirty years on, we will never forget the victims of
the tragedy, but we must carry on with courage, confidence and hope," said Bai.
Zhang He, secretary of the CPC Tangshan City
Committee, said that citizens have gradually stepped out of the shadow of the
quake and a new Tangshan with a robust economy, a stable society and happy
citizens has been born from the ruins and debris.
More than seven million people live in the 13,472
square-kilometer Tangshan municipal area, including an urban population of three
million, according to the official website of the Tangshan city government.
In the past year, Tangshan's gross domestic product
grew by 15.1 percent to reach 202.7 billion yuan (25.3 billion U.S. dollars),
taking it to first place in Hebei Province.
The 2005 per capita disposable income for urban
residents was 10,488 yuan (1,311 U.S. dollars) and 4,582 yuan (572.8 U.S.
dollars) for rural residents.
Bai said that world seismological history shows that
it often takes several decades or even a hundred years to reconstruct a city
after a major earthquake.
It took San Francisco 30 years to recover from the
1906 earthquake while Japan spent 20 years rebuilding after the 1923 Kanto
quake.
Yet Tangshan completed its resurrection in only ten
years and developed rapidly over the following two decades. "It's nothing short
of a miracle," said the official.
"However, without support from people across the
country and from central government and without the selfless devotion of the
People's Liberation Army, Tangshan would not be where it is today," said Bai.
Though the disaster took more than 240,000 lives, its
positive legacy is the "Tangshan spirit", characterized by teamwork, toughness
and persistence.
He said the Chinese government was keen to
commemorate the day and remind the nation of this dramatic piece of history.
An earthquake measuring 7.8 on the Richter scale
razed Tangshan, 200 kilometers east of Beijing, early in the morning of July 28,
1976, leaving 242,769 people dead and 164,851 critically injured.
The death toll was kept secret for three years and
was revealed in 1979 by Xinhua reporter Xu Xuejiang. Enditem