Space Industry and Business News  
Rescuers find more survivors in China quake rubble

China reaches all quake-hit villages: govt
Relief workers on Monday reached the last of the earthquake-hit villages in China's southwestern Sichuan province, one week after the disaster, a local official said. Li Chengyun, Sichuan's vice governor, said rescuers had arrived in all 3,669 quake-hit villages by 2:28 pm (0628 GMT), when China marked three minutes of silence exactly one week after the tragedy. The last 77 villages were reached early Monday, Li said in the provincial capital Sichuan, as quoted by the official Xinhua news agency. The government has estimated that more than 50,000 people died in the 8.0 Richter-scale quake. But the toll could be even higher, with Sichuan authorities saying Monday that more than 71,000 people were dead, buried under rubble or missing.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) May 19, 2008
Three more people were pulled out of the rubble of China's earthquake on Monday after surviving a week trapped under the debris, state media said, but one of them later died.

An unidentified man in his 80s was dug out of the remains of his collapsed house in Beishan district on Monday morning after surviving more than 160 hours, state television reported.

"The quake happened so long before that villagers all thought this old person was no longer there," the report quoted army officer Qiu Chengliang, one of the man's rescuers, as saying.

"His leg was severed but he still doggedly clung to life."

The exact time of the man's rescue was not given. The location of Beishan was not immediately clear, but the report described it as seriously affected by the quake.

Rescuers also pulled out Li Lingcui, 61, who was freed from the rubble in Beichuan county, one of the worst-hit areas of Sichuan province, at around 10:40 am (0240 GMT), state-run CCTV said.

The state-run Xinhua news agency said she had an infection and many broken bones.

Another woman, 50-year-old Wang Huazhen, was pulled out from under a collapsed residential building at a coalmine in Hanwang town near Deyang city at 11:10 am (0310 GMT), Xinhua said.

She later died despite receiving medical care, CCTV later reported.

Xinhua had earlier given the woman's name as Wang Fazhen.

Dozens of such rescues over the past few days have provided a lift to the national mood following the disaster, which reduced entire towns to heaps of concrete and twisted steel.

China's worst national disaster in a generation has left more than 71,000 people dead, buried or missing, according to Sichuan authorities.

The country's government-controlled media has lavished attention on the rescues, which have included a number of children pinned inside collapsed schools and at least one pregnant woman.

However, many of the stories have involved victims having limbs amputated in desperate bids to save them, and the number of so-called miracle stories has tapered off since Saturday.

China came to a standstill Monday to mourn those who did not make it out of the rubble.

Air sirens wailed across the country as most motorists stopped and blared their horns, bringing an eerie halt to China's usually bustling big cities for three minutes from 2:28 pm (0628 GMT), the moment the quake struck a week ago.

Flags were at half-mast nationwide and at Chinese embassies and missions overseas for the next three days, while cultural and entertainment establishments were also ordered to curtail activities.

earlier related report
Hospital destroyed in quake zone back in business -- online
A destroyed hospital near the epicentre of a massive earthquake in southwest China was back in business Sunday -- online.

A high-tech imaging system went live to link what was the largest hospital in Mianzhu city with the biggest hospital in the Sichuan provincial capital Chengdu, doctors said.

The link enables doctors at the the Mianzhu medical centre -- now based in a tent -- to seek advice from their colleagues in Chengdu, said Liu Rongbo, one of the doctors operating the system.

"We just began today," Liu told AFP in front of two black-and-white monitors that flashed up computer-aided X-ray images of a chest, a broken leg, and a skull from patients in Mianzhu.

"The hospital in Mianzhu collapsed and all the instruments were inside."

Liu said it is the first time the technology has been called into action during a disaster.

The system took almost two days to set up but the doctors' ability to give input to their colleagues in Mianzhu will save lives, he said.

"They depend on our diagnosis."

Rescuers earlier cited by state media said the death toll in Mianzhu had risen to 3,000. The government has estimated more than 50,000 people died from last Monday's 7.9-magnitude earthquake, China's worst natural disaster in a generation.

Doctors said they can write a report on a console below the image screens and then send it through a special intranet line installed to Mianzhu.

The Picture Archiving and Communication System employs technology from Germany's Siemens company as well as from China, Liu said.

Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
A world of storm and tempest
When the Earth Quakes



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Nationalism imbues China quake volunteer drive
Shimen, China (AFP) May 18, 2008
Eight Chinese in their early 20s made their way up a winding mountain road, stopping at each new quake-ravaged peasant home to help the injured. They said they were doing it for China.







  • Icahn moves to replace Yahoo board, restart Microsoft talks
  • Intelsat And Panasonic To Bring Broadband Service To The Skies
  • Google wins from end of Microsoft-Yahoo affair: analysts
  • Microsoft takeover deadline for Yahoo expires without comment

  • Sweden Launches MASER 11 Sounding Rocket
  • Spaceport Kourou Welcomes Fourth Ariane 5 Launch Campaign For 2008
  • Orbital Awarded Contract for Suborbital Launch Vehicle Research by US DoD
  • Arianespace Takes Delivery Of Its Third Ariane 5 In 2008

  • China's new jumbo-jet firm no threat to Airbus, Boeing: state media
  • China unveils new jumbo jet company: report
  • NASA And JAXA To Conduct Joint Research On Sonic Boom Modeling
  • Analysis: Can airplanes go green?

  • Northrop Grumman Begins Installing New Engines On Joint STARS
  • Battlefield Airborne ComNode Enables Real-Time Distribution Of F-22 Data To Legacy Aircraft
  • Lockheed Martin Submits Bid For USAF Space Situational Awareness Program
  • GD Awarded Contract For Next-Gen Cryptographic Technologies

  • US, China Space Debris Still Orbiting Earth
  • Northrop Grumman Resonating Gyro Achieves 10 Million Operating Hours In Space
  • TerraSAR-X And NFIRE Fire Up The Pipe With Laser Data Transfer
  • LIDAR Detector Will Build Three-Dimensional Super Roadmaps Of Planets And Moons

  • Globalstar AppointS Thomas Colby Chief Operating Officer
  • SES AMERICOM Announces Change In Executive Management
  • Bill Flynn Joins Americom Government Services to Lead Navy Programs
  • NASA names science directorate deputy

  • US giving China satellite images of quake damage: Pentagon
  • Taiwan shares satellite images with China of quake disaster area
  • Raytheon Reaches Key Milestone On NASA Glory Space Program
  • USGS Awards Satellite Imagery Contracts: Enhancing Access To Users

  • Funambol Pushes Calendars To Connected Dash Express GPS Drivers
  • Sport Business Group To Distribute ProLink GPS Systems In France
  • iSECUREtrac Announces Contract With Kenton County Detention Center
  • Trimble Introduces New Version Of Its Tiny Surface Mount GPS Receiver

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement