China holds day of mourning for 2,000 earthquake victims

China has announced today will be a national day of mourning forvictims of a devastating quake in a remote Tibetan region, as the death toll rose above 2,000.

National flags will fly at half-mast across the country and at its embassies and consulates overseas, marking one week since the magnitude 6.9 quake hit, the governing Cabinet announced. All public

entertainment will also be suspended.

Chinese officials said the death toll in remote Yushu county in western Qinghai province, high on the Tibetan plateau, rose to 2,039, while more than 12,000 people were hurt. Another 200 people remain missing.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Relief efforts could be hindered by rain that was expected in the high-altitude region. Sleet, wind, and light snow are forecast for the next three days, said Guo Yinxiang, spokeswoman for the Qinghai

Meteorological Bureau.

Three people were rescued on Monday, including a four-year-old girl and an elderly woman who survived under the rubble for almost a week in China because relatives used bamboo poles to push water and rice to them until rescuers pulled them out.

The rescue of Wujian Cuomao, 68, and Cairen Baji, four, from a crumbled home in a village about 13 miles from the hardest-hit town of Jiegu was hailed by state media as a miracle and repeatedly played on TV news broadcasts.

Relief workers also freed a Tibetan woman named Ritu from the rubble of a hillside house, state broadcaster China Central Television reported. Half her body had been trapped by the debris, the report said, but her vital signs were stable.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

In Jiegu, thousands of Tibetan Buddhist monks picked at rubble with shovels, performed funeral rites and threw food to survivors from the backs of trucks.

Relief and reconstruction work accelerated, with power and telecommunications services largely restored and aid convoys arriving in droves.

Convoys of military supply trucks were at a standstill, backed up for miles on the main road heading into town. At a supply depot set up on the town's edge, huge stacks of bottled water were piled up outside a warehouse.

More relief goods rumbled past mountainside hamlets where residents pitched government-provided tents along a two-lane highway that is the only connection between Jiegu and the provincial capital of Xining.

The Chinese government has poured in aid to the remote Tibetan region, where residents have frequently chafed under Chinese rule.

Related topics: