From Deseret News archives:
Flood threats add to China miseries
Thousands flee as lakes, rivers begin to overflow after quakes
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Thousands of people are buried beneath rubble in Beichuan, and it is the scene of one of the most intense rescue efforts in the disaster zone. But on Saturday, soldiers, rescue workers and medics had to stop their work and seek higher ground or leave the area. People who were fleeing described soldiers from the People's Liberation Army heeding the flood warning, packing up and driving down the main road leading from the mountains.
There were unconfirmed reports that the immediate danger had passed by evening and that rescue operations had resumed.
Landslides continue to pose one of the greatest threats across the rugged mountainous terrain of Sichuan. Daily aftershocks and tremors at least 168 significant ones since Monday set off new slides, further damaging already fragile settlements and blocking crucial roads. There are at least 13 rivers and lakes that have been dammed up by the quake, the state-run China National Radio reported Saturday, citing an official at the Land and Resource Ministry.
Experts outside China say many of the threatened dams and reservoirs were built along the well-recognized Longmen Shan fault and that the dams might have sustained damage that could cause them to fail weeks later.
Government officials said Saturday that the death toll had risen to 28,881. Earlier in the week, they said the toll could rise as high as 50,000. Officials said Saturday that 12.5 million homes had been damaged and 3.1 million had collapsed.
President Hu Jintao has urged rescuers to continue searching for survivors. Some were pulled out on Saturday, but medical experts say the chances of people living in rubble decrease significantly after the first 72 hours.
The Ministry of Health said Saturday that it had found no epidemics in the disaster areas, Xinhua reported. Hospitals in Sichuan had received more than 116,000 patients, 14 percent of whom were severely injured, the ministry added. More than 34,000 medical workers and disease control staff are in Sichuan Province, and they are being given pamphlets that tell them how to disinfect food and drinking water and how to handle corpses.
Contributing: Zhang Jing, New York Times News Service
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