China Holds Moment Of Silence For Tens Of Thousands Killed In Earthquake

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WILLIAM FOREMAN | May 19, 2008 11:34 PM EST | AP

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A Beijing taxi driver cries while standing beside his car honking his horn for three minutes to honor the victims of last week's devastating earthquake, Monday, May 19, 2008. Across the country traffic stopped and people stood in silence at 2:28 PM, the one-week anniversary of the quake. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

CHENGDU, China — A government warning of a major aftershock sent thousands of panicked survivors running into the darkened streets Monday night following an unprecedented display of mourning for more than 34,000 people killed in a powerful earthquake one week ago.

In shattered Sichuan province, quake-weary residents carried pillows, blankets and chairs from homes into the open or slept in cars after a statement from the National Seismology Bureau was read on television warning that there was a "rather great" chance of an aftershock measuring magnitude 6 to 7. Such jolts could cause major damage.

People in the provincial capital of Chengdu got in their cars and drove east _ toward plains and away from the quake zone to the northwest. At intersections outside the city, clusters of people slept on bedrolls. Cars were parked along a service road to a highway, their drivers sleeping on the sidewalk.

In Mianyang, closer to the quake zone, a hospital moved patients into the square outside the rail station, setting up beds, medicine trays and tents.

The alarm compounded uneasiness in the region, which has been rumbled by dozens of aftershocks since the May 12 quake, including one on Monday night measured at magnitude 5.2 by the U.S. Geological Survey. No damage or injuries were reported.

It came a few hours after China's more than 1 billion people paused for three minutes of mourning _ an observance that previously only honored the death of a top Chinese leader.

At 2:28 p.m., the moment the quake hit, wailing air-raid sirens and the blare of horns from cars, ships and trains signaled the start of the commemoration.

From the broad boulevards of Beijing to the shaken streets of Sichuan province, everyone stood still. Traffic halted in cities, soldiers stood at attention, and people bowed their heads in respect for the dead.

President Hu Jintao led senior government figures in a solemn ceremony televised nationally. Rescuers also briefly halted work in the disaster zone, where hope of finding more survivors was all but gone.

The Olympic torch relay, a potent symbol of national pride in the countdown to the Beijing Games, was suspended.

The occasion demonstrated the profound impact of the quake.

China's Cabinet said the confirmed death toll rose to 34,073, although it is expected to climb. Another 5,260 remained buried in Sichuan, the provincial government said. Almost 250,000 are injured.

The three-minute commemoration _ part of an official three days of mourning _ gave the government a chance to recognize and channel the grief of millions who have watched the disaster play out in unusually free coverage by state media.

Yin Pu, a Beijing psychologist, said the depth of feeling that people expressed Monday was a surprise.

"The only thing that was planned was the time, we could not have imagined that it would be so powerful," said Yin, who is recruiting volunteer counselors to send to the quake zone.

But there were already signs that the unity would be shortlived.

In Xiushui, one of scores of mountain villages in Sichuan province that were cut off for days in the days immediately after the quake, residents were grateful they now had water, food and other supplies. But they complained the response was slow and blamed local officials whom they described as corrupt and indifferent _ a common complaint in rural China that has fueled sporadic protests in the past decade.

"During the first three days after the quake, the local government gave us nothing. No water or food," said Yu Jun, a 44-year-old farmer living in a roadside tent. "In the first few days, we had to get our cooking water from an irrigation ditch. You could see little bugs wiggling around in the water. You would get sick if you drank it."

There were other signs of edginess.

In a gymnasium in Mianyang, east of Xiushui, refugees panicked Sunday when health workers arrived wearing masks, setting off fears of an epidemic. Police were sent in to keep tensions from boiling over.

And in Tiananmen Square, the focus of pro-democracy rallies in 1989 that were crushed by the military, a mourning ceremony erupted into a nationalistic rally as about 1,000 people punched the air with their fists and shouted: "Long live China!" The crowd dispersed after about one hour when police told them to move on.

In a sign the government is sensitive to public perceptions of its response to the disaster, the ruling Communist Party's discipline committee said it had reprimanded three local officials in the quake zone for dereliction of duty, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

The party had instructed its officials to stand "at the front line" of the disaster and these three had failed to do so, Xinhua said.

The state-run China Daily also warned Tuesday that people should guard against Internet fraud while donating to quake victims. Two people were arrested in Guangdong province in southern China for setting up a fake donation Web site.

Teams of rescuers still searched debris with their hands and shovels in the hope of finding anyone alive, but their successes were few.

On Tuesday, a 31-year-old man was pulled out of the debris of a flattened power plant near the epicenter, after being buried for 179 hours, Xinhua said. It did not say how seriously he was injured. Two women were rescued Monday morning from a collapsed building at a mine site, Xinhua reported.

Reflecting the shift away from rescue work to caring for survivors, in Tokyo Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura said a 23-member medical team will leave for China on Tuesday. Japan already has a rescue team working in the northern part of Sichuan.

Signaling it wants help to deal with millions of homeless and injured survivors, China said it would accept foreign medical teams and made an international appeal for tents to provide shelter for the coming rainy season.

More than 200 relief workers were buried in the past three days by mudslides while working to repair roads in Sichuan, Xinhua reported. An official confirmed there had been mudslides causing some deaths but said casualties were still being counted.

For some, there was no solace in Monday's ceremonies.

"I can't feel anything. I have no words," said Hu Yongcui, who did not pause in her search for her missing 17-year-old daughter. "I just want to go home. I just want to find my daughter."

___

Associated Press writers Audra Ang in Beichuan, and Cara Anna, Anita Chang and Henry Sanderson in Beijing contributed to this report.

 
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There is always hope for humanity. In each person's heart is embeded the gene of goodness. We recognize suffering and we have this instinct to help others when we see others in suffering. For example, while driving we see an accident by the roadside and people in pain our instinct is to stop and help them. Whether we do stop or not is another matter but that very instant when our urge to care is what make us human.
While waiting to cross the road by a red light a toddler breaks lose from her mother's grip and walks towards the middle of the road our instinct is to pull the toddler back even before any thought arises. This basic goodness should not be suppressed but allow to glow and with each light of compassion in us, the world will be a better place to live in.
To see people in suffering and to help them or even share a thought of wishing them well goes beyond race, language and religion. It is the after thoughts of selfishness that divide us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:26 AM on 05/20/2008

The devastating Myanmar cyclone and Chinese earthquake are epic humanitarian tragedies that require our help not more petty argument. I wish our US leaders would establish a date and time for a symbolic moment of silence for the victims in both events who've lost their lives and the tens upon tens of thousands more who've been injured. Here are a few resources for donating $$ to aid the victims and families. Even a $5.00 donation would help:

http://www.care.org/newsroom/articles/2008/05/20080509_myanmar_cyclone_main.asp
http://www.worldvision.org/
http://american.redcross.org/
http://www.chinacsr.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 PM on 05/19/2008

China and Katrina??

Has the sense of perspective been totally lost????

How many died in Katrina boys and girls? About 2000.

And China??

What a SILLY comparison!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:05 PM on 05/19/2008

It was very powerful.

The parents are going to be a future driving force.
They will have answers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:16 PM on 05/19/2008

We seem to be a precious few.... Some would rather go to the hate threads, than to stop and think of someone else's pain and sorrow. My prayers are with those in China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 05/19/2008

True.

Seems like most posters here would prefer to revel in the glee of Bush-Republican-NeoCon bashing. It helps them feel superior, while they are simply wallowing in the hate they pretend to detest.

To me, this issue is more important. It transcends politics and all its angry debating.... this is about human suffering ,and miracles, and heroism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:50 PM on 05/19/2008

I think it's valid to be bitter comparing the response to Katrina to the Chinese response to this earthquake. NPR had a report this morning from a stadium in the afflicted area where tens of thousands of refugees (including parent-less children which the report focused on) were gathering. The reporter described the scene as incredibly well organized and orderly. Both Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao (China's President and Prime Minister) visited Sichuan within 24 hours of the disaster to act as leaders and raise the people's spirits.

I know we Americans in a freer society than China's, but it is impossible for me not to contrast the response of this supposedly evil and oppressing regime with the incompetence and indifference of our own democratically elected government's response to a major natural disaster.

But you are right, this is a tragedy first and foremost. My heart goes out to the victims and especially to the families who've lost loved ones. The scenes I've seen are incomprehensibly tragic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 PM on 05/19/2008
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tippy6-

I am here in China living this disaster. But as an American it is hard not to notice the incompetence and indifference by the BUSH administration compared to China's response and out pouring of grief by an entire nation?

I know it shouldn't be the time to debate. More help is needed and we are coping with the aftermath. Just hard to put aside the facts as you see them before your eyes.

Through all the grief.............hope and future always prevail.

Thanks for concern.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 AM on 05/20/2008

I also will observe a moment of silence for those people lost and hurt by this terrible tragedy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:24 PM on 05/19/2008

Where the Tibetens affected?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 PM on 05/19/2008

Who cares?! Why such a narrow minded attitude?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 PM on 05/19/2008
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Yes.......because they are Chinese citizens as well

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:28 AM on 05/20/2008

I am very touched at and grateful for most of the responses to the horrific loss of life in China. It really matters not to whom (or whether) they prayed in those moments of silence. What matters is the show of respect. My deepest sympathy to the people of China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 05/19/2008

When they bowed their heads in a moment of silence, who did they pray to? Mao?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 05/19/2008

You don't require an imaginary invisible friend in the sky in order to mourn the dead.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 PM on 05/19/2008

I thought maybe the government tells them who they could pray to.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 05/20/2008
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They have many gods.......but mainly to their ancestors. That is the most important to the Chinese people.

I know you were being a smart-ass.....but just wanted you to think and become educated.

Knowledge can be your friend..........do not be scared?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 AM on 05/20/2008

Deepest sympathy to all the suffering families and friends of the victims as they come to terms with this devastation.

We here in the US should remember the saying: "there but for the Grace of God go I".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 AM on 05/19/2008

Puts FEMA to shame.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 05/19/2008

Yes indeed, it puts FEMA to shame. Turns out "Godless" China is more humanitarian than "Christian" America. The response to Katrina was unforgivable.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:54 PM on 05/19/2008

Well, I think that if the U.S. government, specifically FEMA, had acted more "Christian", then help would have arrived faster and quicker. True Christians break their backs to help those in need.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 PM on 05/19/2008

Only for the America haters.

New Orleans was THE most corrupt city in America.
Lay the blame there. Ray Nagin and his cronies as well as the entire state
of Louisiana. Totally corrupt. By the time FEMA got involved, it was way too late.

Recall how many former members of the New Orleans police department were convicted of murder. Some are still in prison.
Not Dopey's fault.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 PM on 05/19/2008

The upshot of this disaster brings two things to mind:

1. The Chinese government is still many years behind the West in terms of structural codes, disaster preparedness, and effective response to a crisis.

2. The United States, as hurricane Katrina proved, is mostly on par with China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 05/19/2008
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Didn't "60 Minutes" claim China has a 1.5 TRILLION economic surplus?

Some claim all the manufacturing industry is in China...

Why would China ask for international help, if all the above is true? To borrow a phrase, can't they pull themselves up and out of this tragedy?

The next time I see a relief fund, I will donate. If 60 Minutes was truthful or not, that's still beside the point. For you, spiffarino, are correct. They are still a developing country and this tragedy proves a lot.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:17 PM on 05/19/2008
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Why was America unable to do after Katrina what China has apparently done after this earthquake? Bad leadership perhaps?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:27 AM on 05/19/2008

Apparently the Chinese government cares more about their citizens then the American government.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 AM on 05/19/2008

so, go live in China!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:36 PM on 05/19/2008

Well, not quite...

While the Chinese government *appears* to be doing a good job responding to this tragedy, there is little else the average Chinese citizen can be thankful for in terms of basic rights that we freely enjoy in the U.S.

Learn a bit more about the Chinese "justice" system, their tight grip on internet usage and other media, and you may formulate a different opinion.

I recommend gratitude for being a U.S. citizen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 05/19/2008

Yeah. That's why the schools fell down. All that "care."

Good grief.

2000 dead in Katrina and so far 75,000 in China.

It is ridiculous to compare the two.

Strong central government in China........................ hopeless.

Regional government in Louisiana failed. The Feds were never meant
to be the first resource in a natural disaster.
The situations are totally different.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 05/19/2008

Because China actually staffs their agencies with competent, educated professionals (President Hu Jintao has a degree in Hydraulic Engineering).

The United States on the other hand has people like Michael Brown (a man who spent the 11 years before overseeing horse trial judges for the Arabian Horse Association) heading FEMA! And we accuse China of being corrupt, the Bush administration has defined political cronyism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 05/19/2008
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Unlike Chimpy...

....who has a degree in Frat-Boy Beer Guzzling and Lying!!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:34 AM on 05/20/2008


"Why was America unable to do after Katrina what China has apparently done after this earthquake? Bad leadership perhaps?" by wadenelson1

Yes, W and the Neo-cons represent the "ownership society" - i.e. those who are wealthy. As a result, the poor were left on their own without food, water,or relief in New Orleans. Truly, it was shocking. Not the America I grew up in during the 50's.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:50 PM on 05/19/2008
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