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Quake kills 400; destroys homes on Tibet plateau

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Rescue workers uses a crane to lift up a dead horse buried under a collapsed stable after an earthquake hit Yushu County, northwest China's Qinghai Province, Saturday, April 17, 2010. Rescue workers were still searching through rubble in this remote western region in a bid to find any remaining survivors.

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Children play at a camping site near their collapsed houses in Jiegu town, quake-hit Yushu, west China's Qinghai province, Saturday, April 17, 2010. Hundreds of victims of an earthquake that struck western China were cremated Saturday as necessity forced local Tibetans to break with centuries-old "sky burial" traditions.


 

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Tibrtan monks prepare a fire funeral for vicitms following a strong earthquake on Jiegu toweship of China's Qinghai province just on April 17, 2010 in Golmud, China. Initial reports stood at 791 dead with more than 10 thousands injured.​
 

Ah Hai

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China cremates quake dead as hopes of finding survivors fade

JIEGU, China - China began the mass cremation of hundreds of earthquake victims over sanitation fears Saturday as hopes dimmed of finding further survivors among the more than 400 people still missing.

Hundreds of naked, bloodied and bruised corpses were piled on a huge funeral pyre outside the shattered town of Jiegu on the remote Tibetan plateau and lit by chanting Buddhist monks, three days after the quake killed 1,144 people.

"We have never had a disaster like this. We have never had so many people die. Cremation is the only way to send these souls off," said Jiemi Zhangsuo, a priest who heads the area's main Buddhist monastery that handled the ceremony.

But the struggle was far from over for the devastated region of Qinghai province, with thousands left homeless and injured as authorities fought to get sufficient relief personnel and aid to the isolated region.

The death toll looked set to rise with officials saying on Saturday that more than 400 people were still missing and almost 1,200 seriously injured.

More than 11,000 people were injured in the quake, which caused flimsy traditional m&d and wood dwellings to collapse.

Infrastructure in Jiegu, the main population centre in the quake-hit region has been shattered, with the water supply "basically paralysed", Xia Xueping, spokesman for relief efforts, told a press briefing in Jiegu.

He said all traditional dwellings in the town, home to tens of thousands of people, had fallen while sturdier brick and concrete structures also had either collapsed or suffered heavy damage.

About 13,000 rescue personnel had arrived in the region to aid rescue and recovery efforts but they faced freezing weather and a lack of oxygen due to the altitude of around 4,000 metres.

At least 1,000 aftershocks also continued to rock the area, including one Saturday morning with a magnitude of 5.1 that was centred about 400 kilometres west of Jiegu, according to the US Geological Survey.

Premier Wen Jiabao wrapped up a two-day tour of the disaster area on Friday by casting recovery efforts as a chance to foster unity in a region whose Buddhist ethnic Tibetans have a history of chafing at Chinese rule.

"We can overcome the disaster and improve national unity in fighting the calamity," Wen was quoted saying.

Ethnic Tibetans make up more than 90 percent of people in the quake region.

State media said the dead included more than 100 students and 12 teachers as schools and dormitories collapsed, with dozens more buried or missing.

The casualties recalled the devastating 2008 earthquake in neighbouring Sichuan province, in which thousands of students were among the 87,000 killed or missing in that disaster amid allegations shoddy construction was to blame.

After initial slow start due to the region's remoteness and road damage, authorities said relief supplies including tens of thousands of tents, coats and quilts and tonnes of food had begun pouring into the area.

At a briefing in Beijing, government officials said no signs of epidemic had yet been seen but they ordered stepped-up disinfection efforts to head off the threat.

Rescuers suffering altitude sickness pulled a 13-year-old girl and an elderly Tibetan woman with broken legs from the rubble on Friday, 57 hours after the quake, Xinhua said.

But reports warned that hopes of finding other survivors were fading after the first three days of a disaster.

"The first 72 hours offers the best chance of survival after such a calamity strikes," Xi Mei, a medical attendant with the China International Rescue Medical Team, told Xinhua.
 

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Tibrtan monks prepare a fire funeral for the vicitms following a strong earthquake on Jiegu toweship of China's Qinghai province just on April 17, 2010 in Golmud, China.
 

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A Tibetan monk sprays disinfecting power over corpses of earthquake victims, which have been loaded onto a truck and are to undergo a mass cremation, in the town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 17, 2010.

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A Tibetan monk loads the corpse of a child onto a truck for a mass cremation of earthquake victims in the town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 17, 2010.​
 

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The rubble of a collapsed building, seen on April 15, 2010, after a 6.9-magnitude earthquake hit Yushu county in northwest China's Qinghai province the day before. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)

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Tibetan monks carry a body they dug out from the debris of a collapsed hotel building in the earthquake-hit town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 16, 2010. (REUTERS/Alfred Jin)​
 

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A Tibetan monk stands beside hundreds of dead bodies wrapped in cloth at Gyegu Monastery in the earthquake-hit town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 16, 2010. The actual death toll from Wednesday's quake is still unclear, but the damage was mainly around Gyegu, where most of Yushu county's 100,000 people reside. (REUTERS/Alfred Jin)​
 

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Monks carry bodies, wrapped in cloth, onto a truck for Tibetan burial near the Gyegu Monastery in Gyegu town, in China's Qinghai province, Friday, April 16, 2010. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)

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In this photo provided by China's Xinhua News Agency, two people search for useful goods on debris of their destroyed house at Gyegu Town in Yushu, northwest China's Qinghai Province, Friday, April 16, 2010. (AP Photo/Xinhua, Wang Peng)​
 

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Chinese paramilitary policemen look for survivors under the debris of collapsed houses after an earthquake in Yushu, Qinghai province, April 16, 2010. (REUTERS/China Daily)​
 

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A Tibetan man makes phone calls to his relatives at his destroyed house after an earthquake in Yushu, Qinghai province April 16, 2010. (REUTERS/Stringer)

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dog sleeps near the Tibetan Buddhist Gyegu Monastery which overlooks the surrounding area. Many bodies have been brought to the monastery for cremation after the recent quake, in Gyegu, Yushu County, on April 16, 2010. (FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images)​
 

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Ethnic Tibetans and local residents unload tents from a truck in the earthquake-hit town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 16, 2010. (REUTERS/Donald Chan)​
 

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etans pull down a wall where they believe survivors may be buried amid the debris of a collapsed hotel building in Gyegu town, Qinghai province April 16, 2010. (REUTERS/Kevin Zhao)​
 

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The bodies of an ethnic Tibetan woman and her daughter are seen inside a cage, before a traditional burial, amid the debris of collapsed house in Gyegu Town, Qinghai province April 15, 2010. (REUTERS/Alfred Jin)

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Earthquake survivors cook on a makeshift stove in front of the demolished homes in Gyegu township, China on April 16, 2010. (LIU JIN/AFP/Getty Images)
 

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Tibrtan monks pary for vicitm during a fire funeral following a strong earthquake on Jiegu toweship of China's Qinghai province just on April 17, 2010 in Golmud, China.

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Tibrtan monks prepare a fire funeral for the vicitms following a strong earthquake on Jiegu toweship of China's Qinghai province just on April 17, 2010 in Golmud, China.
 

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Tibrtan monks make a fire funeral for the vicitms following a strong earthquake on Jiegu toweship of China's Qinghai province just on April 17, 2010 in Golmud, China.

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A Tibetan monk sets fire to corpses of earthquake victims, covered with clothes and blankets, during a mass cremation in the town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 17, 2010. Tibetans cremated their dead on Saturday after a massive earthquake struck a remote part of China earlier in the week, killing more than 1,000 people and leaving thousands huddled in the cold in makeshift tents.

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Tibrtan monks carry a dead body to a fire funeral following a strong earthquake on Jiegu toweship of China's Qinghai province just on April 17, 2010 in Golmud, China.
 

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A Tibetan monk gestures during a mass cremation of earthquake victims in the town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 17, 2010.

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Tibrtan monks make a fire funeral for the vicitms following a strong earthquake on Jiegu toweship of China's Qinghai province just on April 17, 2010 in Golmud, China.

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A Tibetan monk takes photographs during a mass cremation of earthquake victims in the town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 17, 2010.

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Tibrtan monks pary for vicitm during a fire funeral following a strong earthquake on Jiegu toweship of China's Qinghai province just on April 17, 2010 in Golmud, China.​
 

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Tibrtan monks make a fire funeral for vicitms following a strong earthquake on Jiegu toweship of China's Qinghai province just on April 17, 2010 in Golmud, China.​
 

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Tibetan monks chant as they pray for the earthquake victims in front of a mass cremation in the town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province, April 17, 2010.

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Vultures fly above during a mass cremation of earthquake victims in the town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 17, 2010.​
 

Rakyat

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DHARMSALA, India (AP): The Dalai Lama said Saturday that he would like to visit the site of the earthquake that hit a Tibetan area of western China, killing at least 1,144 people.

The Tibetan spiritual leader has not set foot in China since fleeing Tibet following a failed 1959 uprising against Beijing's rule in the Himalayan region. The Chinese government accuses him of fomenting separatism in the area, making it very unlikely that he would be allowed to visit.

"To fulfill the wishes of many of the people there, I am eager to go there myself to offer them comfort," the Dalai Lama said in a statement to reporters in Dharmsala, the north Indian hill town that is home to the Tibetan government-in-exile.

The Dalai Lama was born in Qinghai, the province where Wednesday's quake struck, and Yushu county, the area hit hardest, is overwhelmingly Tibetan.

"When Sichuan was rocked by an earthquake two years ago, I wished to visit the affected areas to pray and comfort the people there, but I was unable to do so," he added.

In May 2008, a massive 7.9-magnitude temblor struck Sichuan province leaving 90,000 dead or missing and another 5 million homeless.

The Dalai Lama commended Chinese officials for their quick response to Wednesday's earthquake.

"I also applaud the Chinese authorities for visiting the affected areas, especially Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, who has not only personally offered comfort to the affected communities but has also overseen the relief work," he said.

China claims Tibet has always been part of its territory, but many Tibetans say the Himalayan region was virtually independent for centuries until Chinese troops invaded in the 1950s.
 
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