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Quake kills 400; destroys homes on Tibet plateau

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People use a generator to charge the batteries of their mobile phones after a blackout in 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 after Wednesday's earthquake.​
 

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A Tibetan Buddhist monk leads the way as a man carries a young girl after she was lifted from the rubble of an earthquake as she is rescued after being buried for more than two-days in Yushu county, west China's Qinghai province, Friday, April 16, 2010.

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She was rescued from rubble after being buried for more than two-days in Yushu county, west China's Qinghai province, Friday, April 16, 2010.​
 

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Chinese resucue soldiers march past earthquake damaged buildings in Jiegu, Yushu County on April 17, 2010.​
 

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Chinese resucue soldiers sift through the rubble of earthquake damaged buildings in Jiegu, Yushu County on April 17, 2010​
 

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Ethnic Tibetans and monks walk amid the debris of collapsed houses as they search for survivors in the earthquake-hit town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 17, 2010.

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Praying Tibetan monks are distorted by the heat of the mass cremation for victims of Wednesday's earthquake in Yushu County, west China's Qinghai province, Saturday, April 17, 2010. Monks wearing face masks set ablaze piles of the blanket-wrapped bodies of China's earthquake victims on a mountaintop Saturday, as necessity forced local Tibetans to break with the tradition of leaving their dead out for vultures. (AP Photo)​
 

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A sick woman (C) is helped by her relatives as the walk towards a temporary clinic set up to up quake victims in Jiegu in Yushu county, in China's northwestern province of Qinghai on April 17, 2010.
 

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Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama speaks during a meeting in Dharmsala, India, Saturday, April 17, 2010. The Dalai Lama said that he would like to visit the site of the earthquake that hit western China killing over 1,000 people. Yushu county, the area impacted by Wednesday's temblor, is overwhelmingly Tibetan and the Dalai Lama said that he was also born in Qinghai province where the area is located.​
 

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Ethnic Tibetans injured in Wednesday's earthquake rest on a plane before taking off for Xining to get better medical cares at the airport in Jiegu town, quake-hit Yushu, west China's Qinghai province, Saturday, April 17, 2010.

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Soldiers and medical workers carry an injured ethnic Tibetan woman from earthquake-hit Yushu to an ambulance after a plane carrying the injured landed at Xining airport, where they will get better medical treatment, west China's Qinghai province, Saturday, April 17, 2010.​
 

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An injured ethnic Tibetan man from quake-hit Yushu is carried out of a plane after arriving at the Xining airport for medical treatment in Xining, west China's Qinghai province, Saturday, April 17, 2010.

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A man pushes an injured ethnic Tibetan woman from quake-hit Yushu to an ambulance after a plane carrying the injured landed at Xining, where they will get better medical treatment, west China's Qinghai province, Saturday, April 17, 2010.​
 

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Strong quake hits off Papua New Guinea: geologists

PORT MORESBY: A strong 6.3 magnitude quake struck off Papua New Guinea on Saturday, US geologists said, but there was no tsunami warning.

The quake struck at 2315 GMT with its epicentre located 28 kilometres (18 miles) east of the town of Lae, New Guinea and at a depth of 66 kilometres, the United States Geological Survey said.

There was no immediate alert from the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre, based in Hawaii. - AFP/fa
 

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China's President Hu arrives in quake-hit region
Posted: 18 April 2010 1304 hrs


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People carry a body to a mass cremation for quake victims.


Related News
• China cremates earthquake victims as toll rises
• Dalai Lama wants to visit quake-hit region
• Rotting bodies bring fear of disease to China quake zone
• Mercy Relief to assist earthquake victims in Qinghai
• Up to 2,000 pulled from rubble of China quake
Special Report
• Qinghai Earthquake: Photo Gallery

JIEGU, China : China's President Hu Jintao arrived Sunday in the northwest region hit by a strong earthquake to inspect relief efforts as the death toll rises to more than 1,400, state television reported.

Hu, who cut short a trip to Latin America to oversee the emergency response, was to visit victims in Jiegu, the largest city in the shattered region, four days after it was hit by a 6.9-magnitude quake.

Hu on Saturday chaired a meeting of China's top leaders, urging all-out efforts for the quake response, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

On Jiegu's streets, boxes of bottled water were dropped to help residents cope with water shortages as aid continued to pour in.

Infrastructure in Jiegu suffered major damage in the quake, with the water supply "basically paralysed", Xia Xueping, spokesman for relief efforts, told a news briefing in the town.

About 13,000 rescue personnel have so far arrived in the region to aid rescue and recovery efforts, state media reported.

Geng Yang, the head of the civil affairs bureau in Qinghai province, told reporters that essential items such as food, drinking water, cold-weather tents, quilts and clothing remained in short supply in the isolated area.

A 20-member Red Cross team from Taiwan was expected to arrive in the quake zone on Sunday, Xinhua reported, to help with surgery and public health work.

Officials have warned of a growing disease threat due to sanitation risks including damage to water supplies that could leave them polluted, although no such outbreaks had yet been reported.

The Dalai Lama, who Beijing considers a separatist and was born in Qinghai province, has appealed to the Chinese authorities to allow him to visit the quake zone, where nearly 12,000 people were injured and 100,000 left homeless.

In Jiegu, residents were talking excitedly about the possibility of the Tibetan spiritual leader visiting for the first time since he fled after a failed 1959 uprising against Chinese rule.

"Everyone would like to see the Dalai Lama come here. He should come here," said 52-year-old Dorje, who like many Tibetans goes by one name, as he circled a local temple in a daily prayer ritual.

"The Dalai Lama was born in Qinghai," he said with a smile. "I think the government will allow him to come home."

However, it appeared unlikely Beijing would allow the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader to visit the crippled area to comfort victims in person.

The Dalai Lama praised the official response to the disaster, "especially Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, who has not only personally offered comfort to the affected communities, but has also overseen the relief work".

Tibetan Buddhist monks wearing maroon-and-saffron robes have been a prominent part of the rescue effort, digging by hand in search of survivors after the quake pancaked traditional m&d and wood homes.

Monks cremated hundreds of victims on Saturday as hopes dimmed of finding further survivors and rising fears of disease. The official toll stood at 1,484 dead and more than 300 missing.

Naked, bloodied and bruised corpses were piled on a massive funeral pyre outside Jiegu on the remote Tibetan plateau and lit by chanting Buddhist monks.

The scale of the calamity and fears of disease forced a break from traditional Tibetan "sky burials" in which corpses are left on mountaintops to decompose or be consumed by vultures.

Health authorities in the quake zone are particularly concerned that marmots who emerged from their burrows after the quake could spread pneumonic plague, Xinhua cited Jie Xuehui, a provincial health official, as saying.

A team of 16 quarantine workers and 10 plague specialists, equipped with disinfection vehicles and medicines and vaccines had been deployed, Jie said.

A light snowfall fell Saturday in the region, where relief efforts have been complicated by sub-zero temperatures at night and scant oxygen due to the altitude of around 4,000 metres (13,000 feet).

- AFP/ir
 

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Chinese President Hu Jintao (centre R) waves to rescuers during his visit amid the earthquake devastation in Jiegu, Yushu country, in China's northwestern province of Qinghai on April 18, 2010. Hu travelled to remote quake-hit northwestern China to inspect relief efforts as rescuers struggled to cope with a disaster that has killed more than 1,400 people.​
 

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Chinese President Hu Jintao (C) speaks to rescuers during his visit amid the earthquake devastation in Jiegu, Yushu country, in China's northwestern province of Qinghai on April 18, 2010.

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Chinese President Hu Jintao, right, comforts a girl receiving medical treatment at Jiegu town in earthquake-hit Yushu county in west China's Qinghai province, Sunday, April 18, 2010.​
 

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A young quake survivor uses a mobile phone in an attempt to reach relatives in Jiegu, Yushu County, on April 18, 2010

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An image of the Dalai Lama giving a thumbs-up gesture is seen on the windscreen of a vehicle in Jiegu, Yushu County, on April 18, 2010 in this remote region of northwest China's Qinghai province. On the streets of Jiegu conversation buzzed on April 18 about the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader's request to Beijing to let him visit the earthquake disaster area. The Dalai Lama made his appeal on April 17, saying he wanted to be with the earthquake victims in Qinghai, where he was born nearly 75 years ago but has not set foot in since he fled a failed anti-Chinese uprising in 1959.​
 

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Tibetans on motorcycles are stopped by a policewoman at a roadblock in anticipation of a visit by Chinese President Hu Jintao as search and rescue operations continue in Jiegu, Yushu County, on April 18, 2010​
 

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Quake survivors sit amid the rubble watching search and rescue operations underway in Jiegu, Yushu County, on April 18, 2010​
 

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Tibetan monks check the site after a mass cremation of earthquake victims in the town of Gyegu in Yushu County, Qinghai province April 18, 2010. Nearly 1,500 people have been killed after a 6.9 magnitude quake hit Yushu county in Qinghai province, where most residents are ethnic Tibetans, devoted to their own branch of Buddhism.​
 

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Tibetan quake survivors sit with their basic belongings at the City of Mani Stone in Xinzhai Village just outside of Jiegu, Yushu County, on April 18, 2010 in this remote region of northwest China's Qinghai province that was hit by a 6.9 magnitude earthquake on April 14. Established in the year 1700, there are now over two million Mani stones piled on high and the village remains ever popular with Tibetan pilgrims walking their circuit in prayer. Mani stones are stone plates, rocks and/or pebbles inscribed with the six syllabled mantra of Avalokiteshvara (Om mani padme hum, hence the name 'Mani stone'), as a form of prayer in Tibetan Buddhism and the stones are intentionally placed along roadsides and rivers or together to form mounds or long walls, as an offering to spirits. Quake survivors here and in nearby Jiegu see a ray of hope in the request by the Dalai Lama to visit the quake zone after the revered leader of Tibetan Buddhism made his appeal on April 17 saying he wanted to be with the earthquake victims in Qinghai province, where he was born nearly 75 years ago, but has not returned to since 1959 after he fled a failed anti-Chinese uprising.

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Young Tibetan quake survivors push a wheelbarrow loaded with water and supplies near the City of Mani Stone in Xinzhai Village, just outside of Jiegu, Yushu County, on April 18, 2010

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A Tibetan child stands in a line waiting for medical treatment at a temporary hospital set up for quake victims in earthquake-hit Yushu county in west China's Qinghai province, Sunday, April 18, 2010.

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Locals take bottle water provided by a monastery in quake-hit Gyegu town of Yushu, Qinghai province April 18, 2010.​
 
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