China earthquake leaves 300 injured, one dead


BEIJING : Thousands of rescuers were deployed in southwest China Wednesday after a strong earthquake left one person dead and more than 300 injured, with over 100,000 displaced, state-run media reported.
The shallow 6.0 magnitude tremor hit late Tuesday in Yunnan province, close to China’s borders with Myanmar and Laos, China’s official Xinhua news agency said. School buildings were widely damaged in the area, reports said, although the quake struck during the night and no pupil deaths were recorded.
Xinhua said 100 schools were damaged and cited a local official as saying an estimated 170,000 square metres (1.8 million square feet) of buildings needed repairs. School construction is a touchy subject in China, where more than 5,000 children died as their schools collapsed on top of them in a huge 2008 earthquake in neighbouring Sichuan province. Shoddy buildings, with corruption playing a key role, were widely blamed, provoking public anger.
The latest quake had taken only one life so far, Xinhua said, citing local officials. More than 124,000 people had been forced from their homes by the quake, Xinhua added, but there had been ‘little to no rain’ in the region in recent days, reducing the risk of landslides. The US Geological Survey (USGS) measured the earthquake as magnitude 6.0.
‘Many houses collapsed and we are investigating the casualties,’ a local official told Xinhua. ‘The aftershocks seem non-stopping.’ China’s President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang were both quoted in state-media urging rescue efforts, with 3,200 troops dispatched in a ‘race to save more lives’, according to Xinhua. More than 800 firefighters were taking part, with 35 sniffer dogs, it said.
The epicentre was in Jinggu county, 85 kilometres (around 50 miles) from Pu’er city, in a region famous for its tea plantations. The quake was also felt in Yunnan’s provincial capital Kunming. China uses a different magnitude scale to the US and Xinhua said the China Earthquake Networks Center gave it a reading of 6.6. The agency said buildings shook for several seconds, while some towns in the area had lost power supply and telecommunications.
‘The whole building was shaking terribly with a loud cracking sound. Plates fell off in the kitchen. We all ran out and the streets are now packed with people,’ Li Anqin, a woman living in Weiyuan town, the county seat of Jinggu, told Xinhua via telephone. Thousands of homes were also damaged in neighbouring Lincang, it said. Photos on social media showed damaged houses, cracked walls and fallen roof tiles, and crowds of people gathered outside into the night.

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