Special
report: Strong
Earthquake Jolts SW China
BEIJING, May 17 -- A top housing official said on
Friday that the construction quality of collapsed school buildings will be
investigated once rescue work is completed in quake-hit areas.
"If quality problems do exist in the school
buildings, those found responsible will be dealt with severely," said Housing
and Urban and Rural Construction Minister Jiang Weixin.
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Rescuers try to move the debris weighing
a trapped middle school student Yang Hong in quake-striken Beichuan
County, southwest China's Sichuan Province, May 15, 2008. A top housing
official said on Friday that the construction quality of collapsed school
buildings will be investigated once rescue work is completed in quake-hit
areas. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
He made the remark during a press conference in
response to reports about heavy casualties of students in the quake-hit areas
where a large number of school buildings collapsed. In certain cases, nearly all
students and teachers perished after they were buried under the rubble.
Jiang said it will take time to properly assess the
situation regarding the collapsed buildings.
Yang Rong, deputy director of the ministry's
department of standards and norms, said in an online interview on Friday that
China has clear requirements on quake-resistant designs for primary and high
school buildings, but "the intensity of this tremor far exceeded the stated
requirements in Sichuan."
The authorities will consider whether to raise the
standards after checking the collapsed schools, said Yang.
The quake that struck on Monday has so far destroyed
more than 4 million buildings in Sichuan, including at least 6,898 school
buildings as of Wednesday, said Han Jin, head of the development and planning
department of the Ministry of Education.
The quake hit at 2:28 pm on Monday, when students
were in class, leading to severe fatalities, Han said.
In Mianyang city, seven schools collapsed, burying
1,700 people, Xinhua News Agency reported.
Another 700 students were reported to have been
buried in a school in the nearby town of Hanwang.
Education authorities in Yunnan, a province bordering
Sichuan, have ordered the demolition of 6 million sq m of dangerous school
buildings.
"The earthquake in Sichuan has sent an alarm that we
should enhance the quake-resistance of school buildings," Luo Chongmin, head of
education bureau of the province, told local media.
Experts have warned that tens of millions of students
in schools from Asia to the Americas face similar risks, yet programs to
reinforce schools or require that new ones be built on higher standards are
inconsistent, slow and inadequately financed.
In 2004, the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development released a study entitled Keeping Schools Safe in Earthquakes,
which concluded that schools "routinely" collapsed in quakes around the world
because of avoidable design or construction errors, or because existing laws and
building codes were not enforced.
"Unless action is taken immediately to address this
problem, much greater loss of life and property will occur," said the
report.
(Source: China Daily)