Special report: Strong Earthquake Jolts SW China
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As of 7 p.m. Tuesday,
southwestern Sichuan Province has reported 12,012 death in Monday's quake, according
to the disaster relief center under the State Council. (Xinhua
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CHENGDU, May 13 (Xinhua) -- As of 7 p.m. Tuesday,
southwestern Sichuan Province has reported 12,012 death in Monday's quake,
according to the disaster relief center under the State Council.
Another 9,404 were buried in debris, 7,841 were
missing and 26,206 people were injured, according to the headquarters.
Li Chengyun, vice governor of Sichuan, provided a
breakdown of the death toll, including 161 in the Aba Tibetan and Qiang
Autonomous Prefecture, 7,395 in Mianyang City, 2,648 in Deyang City, 959 in the
provincial capital Chengdu and 700 in Guangyuan City. Other casualties were
reported in cities including Ya'an, Ziyang and the Garze Tibetan Autonomous
Prefecture.
The death toll climbed from an earlier tally provided
by the Ministry of Civil Affairs, which put the Sichuan death toll at 11,608.
Authorities said the death toll might change every hour, as they heard reports
from rescuers who were seizing every minute to pull out bodies from the
earthquake rubble.
The earthquake, which centered on the province's
Wenchuan County at 2:28 p.m. Monday, has left the province in chaos. More than
3.46 million houses were wracked, Li said.
Li said he was deeply saddened by the super
earthquake. He called on both officials and the masses in Sichuan to speed up
efforts to fight the disaster and rescue themselves.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, who arrived in Sichuan
Monday afternoon to oversee rescue work, ordered the clearance of rocks and mud
slides that were blocking roads to the epicenter by midnight on Tuesday.
"People are trapped in debris; we must use every
second," he told an emergency meeting at 7:00 a.m. Tuesday.
On Tuesday afternoon, a brigade of about 30 soldiers
reached Yingxiu Town of the earthquake epicenter Wenchuan, the disaster relief
headquarters in the Chengdu Military Area Command said.
The soldiers reported they saw more than 70 percent
of the roads in the town were wracked, and nearly all bridges collapsed. A large
number of people were believed to be under the debris.
They said 3,000 people were known to have survived,
and the town's total population is 12,000. No information on detailed casualties
could be available.
Li Shiming, commander of the Chengdu Military Area
Command, said the soldiers had distributed food and water to children and
injured people in the town, and more supplies would be airdropped to the
area.