Special report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
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Students read books through candle light in a tent in the No.1 Middle School of the quake-hit Yongren County, southwest China's Yunnan Province, Sept. 3, 2008. School buildings and dormitories of the middle school were badly damaged in the 6.1-magnitude earthquake which hit Panzhihua and Huili in Sichuan Province and the neighboring Yunnan Province on Aug. 30. Hence, the school has postponed its new semester to Sept. 5 and built 28 tent classrooms for temporary use on its playground.(Xinhua/Chen Haining) Photo Gallery>>> |
PANZHIHUA, Sichuan, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) -- More than 35,000 students in a city in southwest China's quake-hit Sichuan Province started the new semester in tents and makeshift classrooms on Monday, about one week after their peers nationwide began the new school year.
Altogether, 12,099 students resumed classes in tents
while another 23,584 attended in undamaged or temporary classrooms converted
from student sports and entertainment centers in Panzhihua, according to Kong
Wei, the local education bureau head. The city was one of the worst hit in the
Aug. 30 quake.
The 6.1-magnitude tremor had killed at least 38
people in Sichuan and Yunnan provinces as of Sept. 3.
"The earthquake has caused damages to 183 out of the
598 local schools, leaving above one-fifth of the city's students without safe
classrooms before the new school year," Kong said.
The city requested tents after the earthquake and was
immediately overwhelmed by the nation's donation enthusiasm.
In addition, China promised to provide more portable
houses to ensure all students in the city could move out of tent classes before
winter.
"In the seven days when we were left with nowhere to
study, I read text books by myself," said Sun Yiwen, a grade nine student. He
was among 750 students relocated to a nearby school for members of the Communist
Party of China from the Datian Middle School where the quake had devastated
almost all the buildings.
"I am confident in myself for the new semester
because it is almost as convenient as where I used to study."
However, students in Huili County in neighboring
Yunnan weren't as lucky.
The county, which has been plagued by continuous
aftershocks, postponed the start of its new semester to the end of October for
the lack of prefabricated buildings and tents to build temporary classes and
dormitories.
In total, 58 affected schools required 150,000 square
meters of prefab buildings and 140 tents, said Hu Kun, the county's Communist
Party secretary.
The county initially postponed the openings to Monday
after 20 percent of its school buildings were damaged.
The quake affected 153 of the 290 primary and middle
schools in Huili, damaging 2,520 school houses and causing 140 million yuan
(20.5 million U.S. dollars) in losses, according to the county education bureau.