Ludian - XINHUA
Rescuers are risking their lives as they work to open roads and defuse the threat of barrier lakes in mountainous areas of southwest China's Yunnan Province Tuesday after a devastating earthquake.
Landslides have blocked roads leading to Longtoushan Township in Ludian County, epicenter of Sunday's tremor, which killed at least 410 people and injured more than 2,300 others.
A road leading to a large barrier lake on Niulan River was made passable after 38 hours of repairs by an armed police squad. Repair work is underway on three other roads in the quake zone.
Barrier lakes, formed by landslides blocking rivers, are a recurrent threat to the lives of victims and rescuers alike. A 24-year-old border policeman is missing after he was hit by a falling rock as he attempted to swim a barrier lake in search of survivors.
More than 60 soldiers were trapped by a sudden flood from a barrier lake Tuesday afternoon and were rescued by another team of armed police.
RESCUE CONTINUES
Rescuers are still racing against time to save lives as the death toll rises. More fatalities may still be reported as the rescue work spreads to remote locations. At midday Tuesday, rescuers dug the body of a ten-year-old girl out of a collapsed house in Longtoushan.
"We have detected 12 people buried beneath the rubble, but unfortunately there are no signs of life," said Zhang Wukuan with a special rescue team. "Four bodies have been recovered."
In Tangjiawan, Longtoushan, villagers carried the bodies of six dead residents 10 km out of the mountains on makeshift stretchers.
"Our medicine is running out and more injured people are still being sent to us," said Chen Wangchang, head of Ludian Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital.
Relief goods such as food and tents were airlifted to several villages in Longtoushan Tuesday. Traffic controls are in place of the main road between Ludian's county seat and Longtoushan, prioritizing ambulances and vehicles carrying relief goods.
Workers are repairing roads but their efforts have been hindered by continuous downpours, falling rocks and aftershocks.
On one major road linking Zhaotong and Qiaojia, workers are removing 25 million cubic meters of debris.
Electricity supplies have resumed for three quarters of more than 38,000 households in Zhaotong and communications have mostly been restored, according to the local grid company and telecom operators.
The disaster has also damaged many small reservoirs near the epicenter, affecting drinking water for over 300,000 people. Workers have begun emptying two cracked reservoirs.
One huge quake lake has swamped dozens of homes in Jiangbian Village and continues to threaten other nearby villages, said local hydrological officials. The lake was formed after a landslide near the Hongshiyan hydropower station, which is still under construction. The water level is increasing at a speed of 30 cm per hour.
The quake, the strongest in 14 years, struck at 4:30 p.m. Sunday (Beijing Time) with its epicenter in Longtoushan Township, Ludian County in Zhaotong City, affecting 1.08 million people in the cities of Zhaotong and Qujing.
Nearly 80,000 homes collapsed and 124,000 were seriously damaged.