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Rescuers search for buried people at the rubble in the quake-devastated Beichuan County, southwest China's Sichuan Province, May 18, 2008. A survivor named Tang Xiong was saved from the rubble on May 18, 139 hours after being buried.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
CHENGDU, May 18 (Xinhua) -- Exhausted rescuers have
pulled out more survivors on Sunday from the rubble left by the devastating
southwest China earthquake on May 12.
A woman named Yu Jinhua was saved alive around 8:10
p.m. Sunday from a flattened power plant in the Yingxiu Town of quake epicenter
Wenchuan County.
"This is already a miracle. We believe she has been
trapped more than 150 hours," said Lu Changchun, who came from Shandong and led
the rescue operation.
A group of fire-fighters discovered Yu early Friday,
but the rescue had been very difficult due to oddly misshaped structures on top
of the woman and continuous aftershocks, Lu said.
"We had to be very careful and we tried five
different plans. There was a dead body in the way, and her legs were already
putrefied," Lu said.
Rescuers dug a five-meter deep whole to reach the
woman, and had to amputate her legs before saving her.
"She was in a delirious state. She murmured she was already in a hospital and plead to stop saving her. We fed her milk and water, and her families were there to reassure her," said Ma Gang, another rescuer.
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-Rescuers search for buried people at a rubble in Yingxiu Township, one of the worst-hit areas in the quake-devastated Wenchuan County, southwest China's Sichuan Province, May 18, 2008.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Yu has been taken to a nearby surgery.
Also in Yingxiu, a man named Shen Peiyun, 53, was
rescued from his collapsed office building at 3:36 p.m. Sunday, after 146 hours
in the rubble.
He suffered head injuries and was sent to Huaxi
Hospital affiliated to Sichuan University in Chengdu. Doctors said he had a
"very good chance" of recovery.
Shen was conscious and clutched the hand of a
People's Liberation Army doctor throughout his 30-minute trip by helicopter to
the provincial capital Chengdu, the China Central Television reported.
Sunday also witnessed another tale of survival in
which a slightly bruised man Tang Xiong was pulled from a collapsed hospital of
Beichuan County at 9:15 a.m., 139 hours after the quake.
Tang was still conscious when he was pulled out, said
rescuers. His wife was rescued on Thursday.
The survival tales followed from Saturday which saw
more than 60 people saved from the earthquake wreckage.
Also in Beichuan, one of the worst-hit counties in
the 8.0-magnitude quake, a man Wu Jianping was rescued at 9:55 p.m. Saturday
from a collapsed building, 127 hours after the tremor.
Monday's quake, the strongest to hit New China, had
killed 32,476 people as of 2 p.m. Sunday, including 31,978 in Sichuan. An
additional 220,109 people were injured nationwide, according to the emergency
response office of the State Council.
A 61-year-old woman, who had been buried for 127 hours, was saved from a ruined dormitory building in Dujiangyan by Russian rescuers late Saturday night. She was the first survivor found by a foreign rescue team.
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Russian rescuers try to take a body out of the debris in Dujiangyan, a city of southwest China's Sichuan Province, May 18, 2008.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Although the time for the best chance of rescue, the
first 72 hours after an earthquake, had passed, "saving people's lives is still
the top priority of the relief work", President Hu Jintao said Saturday night.
Hu flew to Sichuan on Friday from Beijing to oversee
relief work in the worst-hit areas. The government has mobilized rescue staff to
conduct thorough searches in quake-ravaged villages for possible survivors and
to never give up.
Qian Gang, author of the book Tangshan Earthquake,
said 72-hourperiod was just an average time, as many people had survived for
much longer.
Qian, who spent ten years interviewing survivors of
the Tangshan earthquake that claimed more than 240,000 lives in 1976 in Hebei
Province, said it was possible that people could live after being buried for
more than eight days if they had the will to survive.
He cited the case of an elderly woman who drank her
own urine to sustain her for 13 days until rescuers pulled her out of the
debris.
REACHING TO REMOTE VILLAGES
On Sunday, President Hu asked rescuers to use "every
available means" to reach every village affected by the earthquake.
"We must try every method to send rescuers to every
quake-hit village, instead of just working in towns and cities, since a large
number of soldiers have entered the quake-hit regions," said Hu, while visiting
Yinghua township of Shifang city.
"We must send rescue teams, carrying food and
drinking water, to the worst-hit villages, even on foot, as soon as possible,"
Hu said, traveling on bumpy roads to visit one quake-hit villages to another,
comforting victims and encouraging rescuers.
He was surrounded by wailing women when he visited a
temporary shelter camp at Yinghua.
"I know you lost family and property. I share the
pain with you," he said. "We will try every effort to save your people once
there is the slightest hope and possibility."
Hu also hugged an 8-year-old boy when visiting a
family in the camp and told him, "You must learn to be brave and not to
surrender to difficulties even if you are a child. We shall have confidence,
courage and strength."
Walking over the rubble of a fertilizer factory
building, Hu told the rescuers working at the site that every trapped person was
counting on them and they should seize every second to work as time was limited.
"I truly believe that the heroic Chinese people will
not yield to any difficulty!" he shouted to a group of rescuers.
¡¡¡¡NATION IN GRIEF
On Sunday, China announced a rare three-day national
mourning in tribute to the quake victims. The national flags will be kept at
half-mast and all public amusements will be suspended. The Olympic torch relay
will also be suspended during the period.
In less than a week after the deadly earthquake, the
Chinese nation has been pulsating with the lives of the quake-hit victims.
More than 110,000 soldiers and armed policemen were
in rescue operations, with the help of thousands of volunteers who swarmed the
areas to help in any way they could.
Across the country, Chinese people opened their
wallets and sympathized with the people affected in the disaster. Kindergarten
children, beggars and even prisoners made their donations.
In the capital Beijing, people lined streets to
donate blood. In Chengdu, residents and volunteers flooded to stores to buy milk
powder and clothes for children orphaned by the quake. In northwest China's
Gansu province, two villagers carried four tonnes of eggs to the quake-jolted
areas, while people in Xinjiang baked pancakes to be trucked to Sichuan.
Chinese netizens hustled to translate handbooks
written in foreign languages to provide information on the rescue and
psychological intervention.
While the rescue work in the quake-affected areas is
still difficult and epidemic and floods risks are high, the country is making
all-out efforts to fight the disaster.
"The Chinese nation has a honored tradition of
fighting in solidarity and succumbing to no hardship or difficulties," said
President Hu Jintao in Sichuan.
"As long as the whole Party, the whole army and our
people unite in strength and engage in brave fighting, we will get over all
kinds of difficulties and win the battle," he said.
Special
report: Strong
Earthquake Jolts SW China