Special
report: Reconstruction After
Earthquake
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Picture taken on June 10, 2008 from a helicopter shows flood submerge part of Beichuan County in southewest China's Sichuan Province.The influx and outflow of the lake reached a balance at the current water level, according to the Tangjiashan Lake emergency rescue headquarters on Tuesday. The lake's dam was also more secure after the water level in the lake reduced to between 720 and 721 meters at 5 p.m. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
MIANYANG, June 10 (Xinhua) -- China's main
quake-formed lake at Tangjiashan in the southwestern Sichuan Province shrank
drastically on Tuesday as muddy water flows into the low-lying areas.
About half of the lake's 250 million cubic meters of
water has been discharged since the drainage started on Saturday morning, the
Tangjiashan lake emergency rescue headquarters said.
Sichuan Communist Party chief Liu Qibao said Tuesday
afternoon that a "decisive victory" has been achieved in the drainage of the
quake lake.
A man-made sluice channel on the lake's dam was
scoured to between 720 and 721 meters above the sea level at 5 p.m., which means
the influx and outflow of the lake reached a balance, experts with the
headquarters said.
Drainage of the quake lake through the spillway
speeded up to 6,420 cubic meters per second at 11:30 a.m., before it slowed to a
steady 3,888 cubic meters per second at 2:30 p.m..
The crest of the flood from the lake on Tuesday
afternoon passed safely by downstream Mianyang City, where between 300,000 and
400,000 people were left, said Tan Li, the city's Communist Party chief and also
its Quake Control and Relief Headquarters head.
More than 250,000 people in low-lying areas of Mianyang had been relocated under a plan based on the assumption that one-third of the lake volume breached the dam.
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Picture taken on June 10, 2008 from a helicopter shows flood submerge part of Beichuan County in southewest China's Sichuan Province. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
A few villages and farms in Jiangyou City, a city
sandwiched between Beichuan and Mianyang, were flooded, but seven towns along
the river were not, said the city's Communist Party chief Yi Lin. There were no
reports of casualties.
Xinhua reporters in Jiangyou saw trees, barrels, TVs,
fridges and the occasional dead bodies of quake victims in the roaring flood
water.
Great noise was heard at Tongkou Town along the
Tongkou River, where the water level surged by about 20 meters from Monday.
Due to the torrential outflow, the lake water level
kept on decreasing from 740.37 meters above the sea level when the spillway
became operational on Saturday morning.
The brownish lake water burst the dams of four
smaller quake lakes on the lower reaches of Tangjiashan and flowed into the
low-lying Beichuan County that had been flattened in the 8.0-magnitude quake on
May 12.
Faster drainage of the Tangjiashan Lake had eased the
peril on the lower reaches, but the emergency headquarters was still on alert
for further landslides and dam bursts, said Commander-In-Chief Jiang Jufeng.
Hydrological workers had already observed cracks in
the dam, and helicopters were arranged to evacuate all the emergency workers,
mostly soldiers with the People's Liberation Army (PLA) and the armed police.
More than 200 armed police officers worked round the
clock for four days to drain the lake. Once overflowed, it could threaten some 1
million residents living on the lower reaches.
A man-made spillway started to drain from the lake on
Saturday morning and military engineers used recoilless guns, bazookas and
dynamites on Sunday and Monday to blast boulders and other obstructions in the
channel and speed up the outflow.
As a result of two massive blasts on Monday evening
which broke through the "bottleneck" in the spillway, the water outflow speeded
up drastically on Tuesday compared with 80 cubic meters on Monday night.
The Tangjiashan quake lake, formed after quake-triggered landslides from the Tangjiashan Mountain, blocked the Tongkou River running through Beichuan County, one of the worst-hit areas in the May 12 quake.
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Picture taken at 9 a.m. of June 10, 2008
from a military helicopter shows the water gushed out of the Tangjiashan
quake lake in southewest China's Sichuan Province. Drainage of the quake
lake through a manmade spillway speeded up to 1,760 cubic meters per
second at 9:30 am on Tuesday, whereas water flow in the lower reaches of
the lake, in Beichuan County, reached 2,240 cubic meters per second.
(Xinhua/Li Gang) Photo
Gallery>>> |
Alert remains as China's main quake
lake continues to swell
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Picture taken on June 10, 2008 from a
military helicopter shows floodwater flowing beneath the Dongfanghong
bridge of Mianyang city in southewest China's Sichuan Province. Drainage
of the quake lake through a manmade spillway speeded up to 1,760 cubic
meters per second at 9:30 am on Tuesday, whereas water flow in the lower
reaches of the lake, in Beichuan County, reached 2,240 cubic meters per
second. (Xinhua/Li Gang) Photo
Gallery>>> |
MIANYANG, Sichuan, June 9 (Xinhua) -- China remained on alert Monday as the
water level of the Tangjiashan quake-formed lake in the southwestern Sichuan
Province continued to rise after two days of drainage.
The water level in the lake reached 742.58 meters above
sea level as of 8 p.m. Monday, a rise of 1.3 meters in 24 hours, and 2.59 meters
higher than the manmade sluice that began operation on Saturday morning. Full story
Strong aftershock felt on dam of
China's main quake lake
MIANYANG, Sichuan, June 9 (Xinhua) -- A strong aftershock was felt on the dam of
the Tangjiashan "quake lake" at around 11:04 a.m. Monday, a Xinhua reporter at
the site said.
The tremor sent rocks rolling down the surrounding
mountains and splashing into the quake-formed Tangjiashan Lake in Mianyang City,
one of the hardest-hit areas in the May 12 earthquake. Full story
Chinese premier urges no relaxation in
epidemic prevention in quake areas
BEIJING, June 9
(Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Monday said the medical treatment and
epidemic prevention tasks in the quake regions were still tough and no
relaxation would be allowed.
Presiding over a quake relief meeting here, Wen urged
bolstering the treatment of the injured to minimize fatalities and
disability. Full story