Politics

A 6.2-magnitude earthquake strikes northwest China, leaving at least 118 people dead, according to official media.

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It happened prior to the China Earthquake Connections Centre announcing that another one had occurred in the northwest region of the country in the Xinjiang area. It’s unclear at this time whether the second earthquake caused any fatalities or injuries.

Prior to late at night around the world on Monday, the region of Gansu was struck by an earthquake with a magnitude of 6.2, which resulted in the deaths of 105 people, according to the legitimate Xinhua News Agency of China.

Following the earthquake, 13 more people perished in the nearby province of Qinghai.

Northwest China is struck by a 6.2 magnitude earthquake that has left at least 131 people dead, according to official media.

A minimum of 20 individuals remain unaccounted for, and over 550 individuals have sustained injuries overall.

President Xi Jinping has reportedly called for a comprehensive search and rescue operation in an attempt to reduce the number of casualties, according to China’s state broadcaster CCTV.

Roughly three miles from the Qinghai-Gansu provincial boundary, the earthquake occurred in Gansu’s Jishishan county.

The earthquake’s magnitude, according to the US Geological Survey, is 5.9.

Communications and transportation infrastructure, as well as power and water lines, have reportedly been damaged, according to CCTV.

The capital of Gansu province, Lanzhou, which is located roughly 900 miles (or 1,450 kilometres) southwest of Beijing, experienced shockwaves.

Based on a social media post with pictures of young people standing outside, university students there reportedly hurried out of their dorms.

The disaster area was receiving tents, folding beds, and quilts, according to CCTV.

Following the 6.2-magnitude earthquake, Xi calls for massive search, rescue, and relief operations.

Following the 6.2-magnitude earthquake that rocked Jishishan County in Gansu Province, northwest China, at midnight on Monday, President Xi Jinping has called for extensive search and rescue operations as well as appropriate preparations for the impacted population to guarantee the protection of people’s property and their lives.

As of right now, the earthquake has destroyed parts of the water, electricity, transportation, and communications infrastructure and claimed 100 lives in Gansu Province and 11 in Qinghai Province.

In order to reduce casualties, Xi, who is also chairman of the Chinese Central Military Commission and the secretary-general of the Communist Group of Chinese Central Committee, requested that local authorities promptly rescue and tend to the injured, closely monitor any changes in the weather, and keep an eye out for any potential secondary disasters.

'All-out' search efforts are called for by China's Xi Jinping after an earthquake claims at least 118 lives.

In addition, he called for the prompt delivery of supplies for relief to the affected areas, the restoration of damaged infrastructure, including that related to communications, electricity, transportation, and heating, and the provision of adequate housing for the impacted individuals to meet their basic needs.

It is requested that a working group headed by the State Council lead the earthquake relief efforts in the affected areas. The The public’s Armed Police Force and the Chinese People’s Freedom Army should work closely with local authorities to provide emergency rescue and assistance for disasters, and they should make every effort to protect people’s lives and their possessions.

Premier Li Qiang issued directives as well, calling for maximal efforts to treat the injured and rescue the stranded in order to reduce the number of casualties.

In order to assist in directing relief efforts, the State Council dispatched an expert team to the affected areas. The provinces of Gansu and Qinghai have coordinated relief efforts, providing the affected areas with instant access to relief supplies like tents and folding beds.

Work on earthquake relief is being done in a systematic way.

Rescuers struggle in below-freezing temperatures while a strong earthquake in China claims over 100 lives.

Rescue crews raced to reach survivors in below-freezing temperatures on Tuesday as an earthquake struck northwest China, leaving at least 116 dead and hundreds more injured, according to state media.

Late on Monday night, an earthquake in Gansu Province’s Jishishan county caused damage to roads and homes. While locals rushed outside and huddled together overnight in the bitter cold of winter, rescuers raced to find survivors trapped under rubble.

According to provincial authorities during a press conference on Tuesday morning, the earthquake in Gansu has caused damage to over 4,700 houses and killed 105 people.

According to authorities, 397 people have been hurt in Gansu so far, with 16 of those injuries being critical and 76 being seriously injured.

The deadliest earthquake in almost ten years strikes northwest China, killing at least 131 people.

According to CCTV, eleven people have passed away in Qinghai, a nearby province.

Just before midnight, many people would have been asleep in their homes when the earthquake struck. The American Geological Survey reports that at a depth of slightly over 6 miles, it measured 5.9 magnitude. With a magnitude of 6.2, the China Earthquake Management provided a slightly higher estimate.

According to CCTV, the tremors lasted for almost 20 seconds and could be felt as far away as 102 kilometres (63 miles) in Lanzhou, the provincial capital.

CCTV footage showed firefighters in Qinghai and Gansu pulling survivors from the debris after some village homes collapsed. There are currently over 1,600 firefighters on duty.

Rescue efforts have been made more difficult in certain areas by the disruption of mobile signals, electricity and water supplies caused by the earthquake.

Unpleasant temperature.

Strong tremors woke up the people of Jishishan. Many hastily fled their houses in search of cover in public spaces. Families are seen huddled up and covered in thick blankets in pictures and videos that appear on state media in a public square.

In the severely damaged town of Dahejia in Jishishan county, authorities have erected tents at a makeshift relocation location on a square, according to CCTV.

CCTV reports that the lowest temperature recorded overnight in Jishishan was -14 °C, or 6.8 degrees Fahrenheit.

Wang Duo, one of the rescue’s experts, told China Newsweek, the state-run outlet, that the “biggest challenge” to the efforts is the below-freezing weather. The “golden period” for rescue is typically the first 72 hours, but Wang noted that the extreme cold in this instance has reduced that crucial window of time.

As the deadliest earthquake to strike China in almost a decade kills over 130 people, rescuers struggle in below-freezing conditions.

A sudden cold snap has gripped large parts of China, involving its northwest, in recent days, causing temperatures in some regions in the north to drop to almost historic lows.

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Tuesday encouraged officials to “make all-out efforts” to find survivors and tend to the injured, pointing out that the accident happened in a cold, high-altitude location, according to Xinhua.

Strong earthquakes are common in China, particularly in the southwest where the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates collide to form the powerful Himalayas and the enormous Tibetan plateau.

This earthquake is expected to be the most catastrophic to strike China in almost ten years, since a 2014 earthquake in Yunnan’s southwest province killed about 600 people.

In 2008, a destructive magnitude 7.9 earthquake struck Sichuan, a province adjacent to Yunnan, killing about 90,000 people.

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