Collapsed houses and
makeshift shelters line the road into Dujiangyan, a historic city close to the
epicenter of Monday’s devastating earthquake, around 50 kms (31 miles) to the
north of the provincial capital, Chengdu. Public transport has
been disrupted on roads into the city, hampering relief efforts and the
attempts of people from out of town to check on loved ones after the quake.
One local man recalled
of the 7.8 magnitude quake: “The walls collapsed on me. My house and all the
furniture and household appliances are gone. After the earthquake,
my cellphone could not receive any signal. There was no electricity and no
natural gas,” he said. “But we are lucky
because no one died in our family.”
Dead bodies pile up
Evidence of the death toll is all around. Dead bodies lie at the roadside, crushed beyond recognition.
Dujiangyan at dusk is an eerie sight, lit only by the headlamps of cars and the glare of lights brought by the rescue teams. All power to the city has been cut, and survivors are now huddled outside, surrounded by untended dead bodies and in need of basic supplies.
“What people need most
desperately are tents and medicines,” a rescue worker bringing supplies to the
city said. “The corpses have been lying around for a few days now. I have been
to Dujiangyan before. But the place is now in total desolation. It is like a
war zone here.”
“Some big vehicles are clearing the place but I can still see some bodies along the road. There are many soldiers stationed along the road. They are providing food and water to the refugees here.”
The official Xinhua
news agency said a total of 47,813 soldiers, armed police and paramilitary
personnel had been dispatched for disaster relief work to Sichuan, with a
further 30,000 personnel now en-route to join them, with Premier Wen Jiabao
directing operations in person.
Damaged infrastructure
“Many schools and even a bank collapsed,” according to one resident of Mianyang city, 160 kms (100 miles) northwest of Chengdu. “We have had no rescue teams working here at all since the earthquake.”
“No one is rescuing those trapped in the rubble,” said the woman, identified only by her surname, Zhou. “No one is dealing with it. But some are still alive in the rubble. The rescue attempt has been delayed too long. Many residents in other villages have run out of water and food,” she said.
Around 600,000 people live in the city, which has one of the highest death tolls for a major city in the province. According to official figures, 5,430 died in the city in Monday’s earthquake, and a further 18,486 are trapped under rubble and collapsed buildings.
Bottled water scarce
Thousands of people now living out of doors for fear of unstable buildings are now running out of food and water, according to a Mianyang resident surnamed Zhang, whose family of five has been in a tent for the past two days.
“Drinking water is very hard to come by here,” he said. “Actually we have run out of water and food. They haven’t been able to send us bottled water.”
“Some people have been drinking the well water but it is so polluted. We are afraid to drink it for fear of disease. There are several hundred of us without water and food in this area,” he added.
A Guangzhou-based worker from the city contacted his family since the quake and confirmed that no rescue teams had yet been seen in the city.
“There are many bodies lying around with no one to pick them up and deal with them,” he said. “There are no rescue teams there, no water and no food back in my hometown. They are desperate.”
But a relief worker in downtown Mianyang said some refugees had managed to get to an emergency relief center, which had access to basic supplies from the government.
“There are bottles of water in the center. We have bread, milk and blankets,” said the worker, surnamed Yang. “There are about 10,000 refugees in the center now. The resources are tight but the government is continuously sending us supplies.”
Original reporting in Mandarin by Lin Di, and in Cantonese by Lee Yong-tim. Mandarin service director: Jennifer Chou. Cantonese service director: Shiny Li. Written and produced for the Web in English by Luisetta Mudie. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.