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Quake kills 400; destroys homes on Tibet plateau

Ah Hai

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BEIJING (Reuters) - A strong earthquake toppled hundreds of homes and some schools in the remote mountainous Tibetan Plateau of southwest China on Wednesday, killing at least 400 people and injuring thousands.
A photo taken by a mobile phone shows destroyed houses after an earthquake hit the Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Yushu, in northwest China's Qinghai province April 14, 2010 in this photo released by China's official Xinhua News Agency. (REUTERS/Xinhua/Zhang Hongshuan)

Troops have been dispatched to Qinghai Province's Yushu county and some aid shipments from private organisations have set off from the provincial capital, Xining.

"I see injured people everywhere. The biggest problem now is that we lack tents, we lack medical equipment, medicine and medical workers," Zhuohuaxia, a local spokesman, told the Xinhua news agency.

More than 10,000 people were injured and thousands left homeless in freezing conditions after a series of quakes and aftershocks caused many of the low, m&d-brick buildings in county to collapse, residents and state media said.

The main 6.9 quake was centered in the mountains that divide Qinghai province from the Tibet Autonomous Region.

"People are very scared," said Pierre Deve, with Snowland Service Group, a local non-government organisation, adding that many had already given up hope for those still trapped.

Some bridges and roads around Yushu have cracked or been cut off completely which could complicate rescue efforts, state television said. The airport is open, but the road connecting it to the county seat has been heavily damaged, it added.

The Tibetan plateau is regularly shaken by earthquakes, though casualties are usually minimal because so few people live there.

Yushu is home to some 100,000 people, spread out over a vast area, but the quake struck near the relatively highly-populated county seat of Jyeku.

Government officials told state media the majority of houses had been badly damaged.

Photos showed larger concrete buildings mostly intact, with rubble around them. At least five people have also died in neighbouring Gansu province, Xinhua said.

President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have demanded no effort be spared in rescue attempts, and sent Vice-Premier Hui Liangyu to Qinghai to oversee relief work, state television said.

SOME SCHOOLS COLLAPSE, MOST STUDENTS ESCAPE

Xinhua reported that the early morning quake had caused some schools and part of a government office building to cave in. Some vocational school students and primary school students were trapped in the rubble, it said, although residents said most students had been able to flee to playgrounds.

"Most of the schools in Yushu were built fairly recently and should have been able to withstand the earthquake," said Wang Liling, a volunteer worker for Gesanghua, a Chinese charity that helps school children in Qinghai. Her group, she said, had heard that a vocational school collapsed in Yushu.

"Many homes have been damaged, but we'll have to wait until this evening, when our staff arrive there, to understand anything specific."

The widespread collapse of school buildings when other surrounding buildings stayed standing, caused anger and accusations of corruption after the devastating May 2008 earthquake in Sichuan Province, which killed 80,000.

"A lot of one-storey houses have collapsed. Taller buildings have held up, but there are big cracks in them," resident Talen Tashi told Reuters.

People from the Yushu prefecture highway department were frantically trying to dig out colleagues trapped in a collapsed building, department official Ji Guodong said by telephone.

"The homes are built with thick walls and are strong, but if they collapsed they could hurt many people inside," Zhuo De told Reuters by phone from Xining after contacting his family in Yushu.

The quake was centered in the mountains that divide Qinghai province from the Tibet Autonomous Region.

The foothills to the south and east of the area are home to herders and Tibetan monasteries of Yushu county, while the area to the north and west is arid and desolate.

The quake was centred 150 miles (240 km) north northwest of Qamdo in Tibet and 235 miles (375 km) south southeast of the mining town of Golmud in Qinghai, and had a depth of 6.2 miles (10 km), the United States Geological Service said.

A magnitude 5.0 quake struck the same region late on Tuesday, and aftershocks of magnitude-6.0 and over rattled the town Wednesday morning, sending fearful residents into the streets.

(Additional reporting by Chris Buckley, Liu Zhen and Huang Yan; Writing by Ben Blanchard)
 

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Rescue workers with sniffer dogs arrive at the airport in Yushu county in western China's Qinghai province Wednesday, April 14, 2010.​

Quake rattles Toronto's Tibet community
Last Updated: Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Residents of Toronto's Tibetan community are feeling the after-effects of a devastating earthquake that struck their homeland Wednesday.
Nearly 600 are dead and 10,000 injured after several quakes struck China's western Quinhai province, a remote and mountainous Tibetan region.
The first quake hit Qinghai's Yushu county early Wednesday morning, forcing people into the streets. The 6.9-magnitude quake was the largest of six tremors recorded in the area in just three hours, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
The region is a world away from Toronto, but news of the quake has sent shockwaves through the city's small, close-knit Tibetan community.

After hearing news of the quake, Toronto resident Tenzin Dakpa, a local monk at Karma Sonam Dargye Ling temple on Vaughn Road, scoured the internet, trying to call home for any bit of news about relatives. His worst fears were confirmed Wednesday when he learned his family's home had been destroyed and that two relatives, including younger brother Paljor, 26, and a young niece died in the rubble.
"We were looking at each other laughing and talking," said Dakpa about a discussion the two had over the internet only a day before. "And today I was explaining he is somebody who passed away and it's hard to believe."
Toronto's Tibetan community numbers about 6,000, most reside in the city's west-end neighbourhood of Parkdale.
'It's not fair what happened to them'
Few have direct relations to the people in the devastated zone. But there's a collective identity forged in the struggle for independence from China. And now a collective empathy.
"They're already having a problem there with losing our country," said restaurant owner Tenzin Valunbisitsang, owner of the family-run Parkdale restaurant Le Tibet.

"They don't have human rights and on top of that they have another issue, like this earthquake."

Many in the community are concerned their relatives in Tibet will face more discrimination from Chinese authorities as a result of Wednesday's earthquake.
For Dakpa too, that worry weighs heavy, so does his sense of loss. As a monk, he is trained to embrace the transience of life. But on this day, he says he's struggling to find the comfort in that.
"I'm completely shocked," said Dakpa. "Not only for my family. All the people who didn't die. Now they have nothing. It's difficult to accept right away."
Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued a statement late Wednesday, extending Canada's condolences for the loss of life as a result of the quake.
"On behalf of the government and people of Canada, I express my deepest condolences to the people of China at this difficult time," said Harper. "Our thoughts and prayers are with those who have lost loved ones and with those who are still missing."
"Canada stands ready to provide support to the people of China during this time of need. Our officials in Beijing are contacting appropriate Chinese authorities to determine whether Canadian assistance may be required."
 

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In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, an injured woman is rescued after a quake in Yushu County, northwest China's Qinghai Province, Wednesday, April 14, 2010.​
 

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Rescue workers pull out children from a collapsed building in Yushu county in western China's Qinghai province on Wednesday, April 14, 2010​
 

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In this photo released by China's Xinhua news agency, soldiers of the Chinese People's Liberation Army carry a survivor rescued after strong earthquakes in Yushu County, northwest China's Qinghai Province, Wednesday, April 14, 2010​
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saratogas

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Both China n India got earthquake together! Strange...somebody is preventing them
frm getting too strong.
 

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In this photo taken Wednesday, April 14, 2010, survivors emerge in an open area, surrounded by collapsed buildings, after an earthquake at Jiegu township in Yushu county, western China's Qinghai province. Soldiers and civilians used shovels and their bare hands to dig through collapsed buildings in search of survivors after strong earthquakes struck a mountainous Tibetan region of China on Wednesday, killing hundreds of people.​
 

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Local people are seen after a 7.1 magnitude earthquake which struck China's Qinghai province just before 8am local time on April 14, 2010 in Yushu county, Qinghai province of China.​
 

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A nine-month-old child injured from the earthquake waits to aboard a flight to Xining city, at the Yushu airport, Qinghai province April 15, 2010. The death toll from the earthquake in China's remote and mountainous Yushu county, Qinghai province, has risen to 617, Xinhua news agency said on Thursday.​
 

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Survivors of Qinghai's earthquake wait for being transferred to Xining for medical treatment at Batang Airport on April 15, 2010 in Yushu, Qinghai province of China. China's leaders have urged rescuers to make 'all-out efforts to save lives' as the death toll of Wednesday's Qinghai 7.1-magnitude earthquake rose to 617.​
 

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This photo taken on April 15, 2010 shows the rubble of a collapsed building after a 6.9-magnitude earthquake hit Yushu county in northwest China's Qinghai province on April 14. Rescuers with shovels and bare hands clawed through rubble to hunt for survivors of the quake in a remote area of China which killed over 600 people and made thousands homeless.​
 

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Survivors of Qinghai's earthquake wait for being transferred to Xining for medical treatment at Batang Airport on April 15, 2010 in Yushu, Qinghai province of China.​
 

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A victims body is pulled out from the rubble of a collapsed building on April 15, 2010 after a 6.9-magnitude earthquake hit Yushu county in northwest China's Qinghai province on April 14.​
 

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A Tibetan resident of Jiegu, Yushu County, in northwest China's Qinghai province shows all she has to eat - a bowl of barley - amid the rubble of their demolished homes on April 15, 2010. Rescuers and aid supplies began slowly rolling into this remote area of northwest China flattened by the devastating April 14 earthquake that left more than 600 people dead and 100,000 homeless. Battling bitingly cold weather and a lack of oxygen, rescue workers clawed with their bare hands through the rubble of homes and schools toppled by the 6.9 magnitude quake.​
 

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Ganden (C), a Tibetan resident of Jiegu, Yushu County, in northwest China's Qinghai province, walks with her son and a Buddhist monk back to the rubble of their demolished home after meeting Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao earlier on his visit here on April 15, 2010.​
 

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A recently rescued woman is carried up a hillside to her home amid the earthquake debris in Jiegu, Yushu County, in northwest China's Qinghai province on April 15, 2010.​
 

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Tibetan residents of Jiegu, Yushu County, in northwest China's Qinghai province have a meal outside their makeshift tents amid the rubble of demolished homes on April 15, 2010.​
 

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A Tibetan woman prays in front of a partially-collapsed house in the earthquake-hit Jiegu town, Yushu, in west China's Qinghai province, Thursday, April 15, 2010.​
 

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Injured survivors take refuge at Yushu airport waiting for transfer after an earthquake in Yushu county in western China's Qinghai province Thursday, April 15, 2010

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Ambulances are loaded to trailers to transport to quake-hit Yushu county in Qinghai province from Beijing Thursday, April 15, 2010.​
 

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A firefighter searches for survivors who are buried in rubble

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Chinese firefighters carry a survivor who was found in the rubbles on April 15, 2010.​
 
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