BEIJING — A landslide buried and flooded hundreds of homes over the weekend in a remote mountainous region of Gansu Province. Officials said Sunday evening that 127 bodies had been recovered and that nearly 2,000 people were missing.
August 8, 2010
BEIJING — A landslide buried and flooded hundreds of homes over the weekend in a remote mountainous region of Gansu Province. Officials said Sunday evening that 127 bodies had been recovered and that nearly 2,000 people were missing.
Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, who frequently flies to major disasters, visited a town near the hardest-hit city, Zhouqu, in far southern Gansu, to supervise relief operations. Rescuers told Xinhua, the official news agency, that earthmovers could not reach the scene and that workers were digging with hands and shovels to reach people who were trapped.
Torrential rains began to fall around 10 p.m. Saturday, the head of Zhouqu County, who goes by the single name of Diemujiangteng, told Xinhua.
“Then there were landslides, and many people were trapped,” he said. “Now sludge has become the biggest hindrance to our operations. It’s too thick to walk or drive through.”
The state-run broadcaster CCTV placed the death toll at 127, and Xinhua said nearly 2,000 were missing. But it was uncertain how many people were hit by the slide or had fled.
Grainy video from the town showed streets covered in thick mud and debris.
“There’s water everywhere,” Liu Yiping, an official in the Zhouqu government, told CCTV by telephone. “It’s flooded everything. It’s just too horrible to witness. It’s so awful.”
The government said it had sent 2,400 soldiers from Lanzhou, the capital of Gansu, about 170 miles to the north, to help with the rescue. About 1,000 firefighters and other workers were sent from nearby towns.
The slide appeared to be the worst in a string of weather-related events that have struck China over a summer marked by torrential rain and high temperatures.
The government said Wednesday that floods had hit 28 provinces this year, killing 1,072 people and leaving 619 missing. The waters have wrecked 1.1 million homes and caused an estimated $31 billion in damage.
A mudslide on July 27, caused by heavy rain, buried at least 21 people in Sichuan Province.
While floods have mainly afflicted the north, much of southern China has suffered the worst drought in decades, forcing the government to import and burn vast stocks of coal to supplement dwindling hydroelectric power.
The landslide on Sunday struck a rural area on the Sichuan border, which is about one-third ethnic Tibetan and has many farmers and herders. Officials said the slide hit about midnight in Zhouqu, a city of about 40,000 bounded by steep mountains and bisected by the Bailong River, which runs lengthwise through the narrow valley.
The debris blocked the river, creating a lake 30 feet deep that flooded half of the town by 1 a.m. and sent residents fleeing to upper floors of buildings. Some of the missing people were believed to have been swept away by floodwaters.
Xinhua said the mud flow, up to six feet thick, inundated buildings and major roads in an area about 3 miles long and 500 yards wide. More than 300 homes in an adjacent village, Yueyuan, were also covered by the slide, rescuers said.
By noon Sunday, 680 people had been rescued and 45,000 evacuated from the slide area. An additional 76 people were reported to have been injured.
By midafternoon, workers had cleared debris from roads to the town, Xinhua said, but floodwaters in the city center were still impeding rescuers.
Xiyun Yang contributed research.
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