Tents arrive for survivors of a quake that killed 126 in freezing,
high-altitude Tibet
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[January 08, 2025]
By KEN MORITSUGU and CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
BEIJING (AP) — Rescuers in the freezing, high-altitude Tibet region in
western China searched a second day for any remaining victims of a
deadly earthquake that struck near a holy city for Tibetan Buddhists,
before shifting their focus to resettling the survivors.
More tents, quilts, stoves and other relief items were being delivered
Wednesday to people whose homes were uninhabitable or unsafe.
Temperatures fall well below freezing overnight in an area with an
average altitude of about 4,200 meters (13,800 feet).
In video aired by state broadcaster CCTV, workers could be seen erecting
rows of tents with metal frames and stakes after nightfall Tuesday.
Meant as temporary shelter, they were lined with quilted padding to keep
out the cold. The workers distributed packaged food items to the shelter
occupants, donning blue winter jackets over their orange uniforms.
The confirmed death toll stood at 126 with another 188 injured as of
Tuesday evening, and no further updates were issued during the day on
Wednesday. Hong Li, the director of Tibet's Emergency Management
Department, told a late afternoon news conference that the work had
shifted from search and rescue to resettlement and reconstruction.-
The earthquake struck an outlying county in the city of Shigatse, the
traditional seat of the Panchen Lama, the second-highest figure in
Tibetan Buddhism. It was not immediately known whether he was in his
Tashi Lhunpo Monastery at the time or how much damage Tibet's second
largest city sustained. The epicenter was about 25 kilometers (15 miles)
from the main part of the city, which is called Xigaze in Chinese and
sprawls across a high altitude plain.
More than 500 aftershocks were recorded after the earthquake, which the
U.S. Geological Survey said measured magnitude 7.1. China’s earthquake
center recorded a magnitude of 6.8. The quake was also about 75
kilometers (50 miles) from Mount Everest and the border with Nepal,
where the shaking sent people running out of their homes in the capital.
A candlelight vigil was planned on Wednesday night in Dharamsala, India,
home to the Dalai Lama, Tibetan Buddhism’s highest figure, and a large
Tibetan population. An announcement on the Dalai Lama’s website said he
would lead a prayer ceremony in memory of the victims on Thursday.
The Dalai Lama is viewed by the Chinese government as bent on making
Tibet independent of China.
Asked about the prayer ceremony, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson
Guo Jiakun said, “We are very clear about the separatist nature and
political schemes of the Dalai Lama and remain highly vigilant.”
Guo expressed confidence that the people in the earthquake zone will be
able to rebuild under “the strong leadership” of China's ruling
Communist Party.
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In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, rescuers transfer the
injured at Zhacun Village of Dingri County in Xigaze, southwest
China's Tibet Autonomous Region, Tuesday Jan. 7, 2025. (Xinhua via
AP)
The Chinese government and followers of the Dalai Lama have feuded
over who should hold the position of Panchen Lama since a boy
appointed by the Dalai Lama disappeared in the mid-1990s and a
Chinese-backed candidate was approved for the position. The Dalai
Lama denounced the move and has refused to recognize the current
Panchen Lama.
China's government says Tibet has been part of its territory for
centuries, but many Tibetans say they were functionally independent
for most of that time. China's People's Liberation Army invaded the
territory in 1950 and the Dalai Lama fled to India nine years later
during an uprising against Chinese rule, seen as eroding Tibet's
unique Buddhist culture.
The death toll from the quake included at least 22 of the 222
residents of Gurum, the official Xinhua News Agency cited the
village’s Communist Party chief, Tsering Phuntsog, as saying. The
victims included his 74-year-old mother, and several other of his
relatives remained buried in the debris.
“Even young people couldn’t run out of the houses when the
earthquake hit, let alone old people and children,” Tsering Phuntsog
said.
State broadcaster CCTV showed orange-suited rescue workers with
sniffing search dogs clambering over huge chunks of debris in the
wreckage of homes. In the hardest-hit areas, rows of houses had been
reduced to rubble. Blue disaster emergency tents with bright red
Chinese flags flapping in the wind had been set up nearby.
More than 3,600 houses collapsed, according to a preliminary survey,
and 46,000 residents had been relocated, state media said.
Tibet is generally closed to foreign journalists over reports about
the ill treatment of the population by Chinese authorities.
Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Guoqing, who visited survivors in the
quake-hit area, called for the acceleration of post-disaster
reconstruction to ensure they can be safe and warm this winter,
Xinhua reported. Power and communications in the area have been
restored, allowing smoother delivery of emergency goods, it said.
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Bodeen reported from Taipei, Taiwan.
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