‘Too dangerous inside’: China quake victims brave freezing night

Shell-shocked residents huddled around small fires in the street in quake-hit Dahejia, in north-west China’s Gansu province. PHOTO: AFP

DAHEJIA, China – As evening brought freezing temperatures to north-western China’s Gansu province, shell-shocked residents huddled around small fires in the street, reeling after the country’s deadliest earthquake in years deprived them of shelter.

The quake, which struck in the dead of Dec 18 night, has killed at least 127 people – mostly in impoverished Gansu – and injured hundreds of others.

Near the epicentre in Dahejia, a remote town around 2,000m above sea level, a middle-aged Muslim woman wearing a black headcovering told AFP it was the first time she had experienced such a powerful earthquake.

“Usually, there are no quakes here. Even the elderly said they had never seen anything like this before,” she said.

She had been shaken awake when the earth began moving, and grabbing her two children, immediately fled into the icy night.

The shop she owned had been badly damaged, so she was now selling her wares on the street.

“It’s too dangerous to stay inside,” she said, declining to give her name.

Multiple buildings in Dahejia had completely caved inwards, and the top of the mosque in the predominantly Muslim town had collapsed askew.

“I am 70 and I have never experienced such a powerful quake in my life,” resident Ma Wenchang told AFP, as he pointed to the deep cracks carved through his home’s walls.

“I can’t live (in this house) anymore because it’s too dangerous. My relatives have been relocated somewhere else.”

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Mr Ma, too, had been sleeping when the earthquake struck.

“When I realised (what had happened) I ran out to my courtyard – and it was still shaking,” he said.

A group of locals sat around a wood-scrap fire next to a line of emergency vehicles, as the sun sank behind the stark terracotta outcrops that are typical of the region.

Multiple buildings in Dahejia completely caved inwards when the quake struuck. PHOTO: AFP

In the town square, volunteers were rushing to set up tents for rescuers.

Thousands of emergency workers were dispatched on Dec 19 to search through rubble and help survivors.

Residents fear the damage to their homes makes them too dangerous to stay in. PHOTO: AFP

“The most urgent task for us is to make things ready quickly as temperatures will reach minus 17 deg C tonight,” a volunteer told AFP.

They were setting up the base “so rescuers can focus on helping people – (many have) no water, no electricity”, she said.

Away from the square, power in the town seemed to be cut off, and the streets were dark. AFP

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