Wednesday, April 21st was a national day of mourning in China, for victims of the magnitude 6.9 earthquake that struck remote Yushu County on April 14th, 2010 with over 2,200 confirmed dead and many thousands injured or homeless. The response on the ground has moved from search and rescue to recovery and care, hampered by geography and weather. The political response is also complex, as official Chinese coverage has emphasized solidarity in crisis despite a long-troubled relationship with the ethnic Tibetan residents. Buddhist monks who had been assisting with relief efforts were asked by Chinese authorities to halt their work last week, some monks complaining it was for political motives, officials claiming it was for safety reasons. The bodies of hundreds of victims were cremated on April 17th, necessity forcing local Tibetans to break with a tradition of leaving their dead out for vultures. (33 photos total)
A man carries his son as they make their way back to their tent at a makeshift camp during a snowfall in Gyegu, Yushu county, China on April 22, 2010. Fierce winds and heavy snow hit China's quake zone, state media said, complicating relief work and bringing more misery to survivors camped outside after their homes collapsed. (AFP/AFP/Getty Images) #
Four-year-old girl Cairen Baji is carried by a rescue worker after she and an elderly woman were dug out from a collapsed mud house near Gyegu town on Monday, April 19, 2010. Relatives had kept Wujian Cuomao, 68, and Cairen Baji alive for five days by sending them food and water through gaps in the rubble with the help of bamboo poles, state broadcaster CCTV said. (AP Photo) #
The Dalai Lama, Tibetan spiritual leader, speaks during a press conference in Dharmsala, India, Saturday, April 17, 2010. The Dalai Lama said Saturday that he would like to visit western China's quake-hit Yushu county, which is overwhelmingly Tibetan. He also said that he was born in Qinghai province where the earthquake was centered. (AP Photo/Ashwini Bhatia) #
Chinese President Hu Jintao, (center right, facing left), is greeted upon his arrival in a temporary hospital at Gyegu town on Sunday, April 18, 2010. Hu flew to the remote, mountainous Tibetan region devastated by an earthquake as the flow of rescue supplies picked up pace. (AP Photo/Andy Wong) #
Rescuers stop work and observe three minutes of silence at 10:00 am (0200 GMT), in silent tribute to the quake victims, in Gyegu, China on April 21, 2010. China observed a day of national mourning for victims of its killer quake, with newspaper front pages bathed in black and flags lowered to half-mast around the country. (STR/AFP/Getty Images) #
No comments:
Post a Comment