<tt id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"></pre></pre></tt>
          <nav id="6hsgl"><th id="6hsgl"></th></nav>
          国产免费网站看v片元遮挡,一亚洲一区二区中文字幕,波多野结衣一区二区免费视频,天天色综网,久久综合给合久久狠狠狠,男人的天堂av一二三区,午夜福利看片在线观看,亚洲中文字幕在线无码一区二区

          Asia-Pacific

          Rescuers struggle to save lives after Chile quake

          (Agencies)
          Updated: 2010-02-28 21:55
          Large Medium Small

          Rescuers struggle to save lives after Chile quake

          A bridge sits destroyed by a major earthquake along the Panamerican Highway near Curico February 27, 2010. A huge magnitude-8.8 earthquake struck Chile early on Saturday, knocking down homes and hospitals, and triggering a tsunami that rolled menacingly across the Pacific. [Agencies]

          CONCEPCION, Chile: Rescuers edged their way toward quake victims trapped in a toppled apartment block early Sunday even as looters stole food and robbed banks after one of the strongest earthquakes ever recorded struck Chile.

          Authorities put the death toll from Saturday's magnitude-8.8 quake at 214, but believed the number would grow. They said 1.5 million Chileans were affected and 500,000 homes severely damaged by the mammoth temblor.

          A tsunami caused by the quake that swept across the Pacific killed several people on a Chilean island but caused little damage in other countries, after precautionary evacuations of hundreds of thousands of people. The tsunami warning was lifted a day after the earthquake.

          President Michelle Bachelet, who leaves office March 11, declared a "state of catastrophe" in central Chile. "It was a catastrophe of devastating consequences," she said.

          Police said more than 100 people died in Concepcion, the largest city near the epicenter with more than 200,000 people. The university was among the buildings that caught fire around the city as gas and power lines snapped. Many streets were littered with rubble from edifices and inmates escaped from a nearby prison.

          Police used water cannon and tear gas to scatter people who forced open the doors of the Lider supermarket in Concepcion, hauling away everything from diapers to dehydrated milk to a kitchen stove.

          Across the Bio Bio River in San Pedro, others cleared out a shopping mall. A video store was set ablaze, two automatic teller machines were broken open, a bank was robbed and a supermarket emptied, its floor littered with mashed plums, scattered dog food and smashed liquor bottles.

          The largest building damaged in Concepion was a newly opened 11-story apartment that toppled backward, trapping an estimated 60 people inside apartments where the floors suddenly became vertical and the contents of every room slammed down onto rear walls.

          Related readings:
          Rescuers struggle to save lives after Chile quake Tsunami waves hit Pacific regions after Chile quake
          Rescuers struggle to save lives after Chile quake China ready to deliver assistance to Chile: FM
          Rescuers struggle to save lives after Chile quake North Japan hit by 30 cm tsunami after warning
          Rescuers struggle to save lives after Chile quake Quake hits north Pakistan, Afghanistan; no damage
          Rescuers struggle to save lives after Chile quake Chileans shocked by massive earthquake

          "It fell at the moment the earthquake began," said 4th Lt. Juan Schulmeyer of Concepcion's 7th Firefighter Company, pointing to where the foundation collapsed. A full 24 hours later, only 16 people had been pulled out alive, and six bodies had been recovered.

          Rescuers heard a woman call out at 11 pm Saturday from what seemed like the 6th floor, but hours later they were making slow progress in reaching her. Rescuers were working with two power saws and an electric hammer on a generator, but their supply of gas was running out and it was taking them a frustrating hour and a half to cut each hole through the concrete.

          "It's very difficult working in the dark with aftershocks, and inside it's complicated. The apartments are totally destroyed. You have to work with great caution," said Paulo Klein, who was leading a group of rescue specialists from Puerto Montt. They flew in on an air force plane with just the equipment they could carry. Heavy equipment was coming later along with 12 other rescuers.

          The quake tore apart houses, bridges and highways, and Chileans near the epicenter were thrown from their beds by the force of the mega-quake, which was felt as far away as Sao Paulo in Brazil?- 1,800 miles (2,900 kilometers) to the east.

          The full extent of damage remained unclear. Ninety aftershocks of magnitude 5 or greater shuddered across the disaster prone Andean nation within 24 hours of the initial quake. One was nearly as powerful as Haiti's devastating January 12 earthquake.

          In the village of Reumen, a tractor trailer slammed into a dangling pedestrian overpass and 40 tons of concrete and steel crunched the truck, covering Chile's main highway with smashed grapes, tomatoes and cucumbers?- one of several overpasses toppled along the highway.

          Truck driver Jaime Musso, 53, thought his truck was being buffeted by strong winds and by the time he saw the overpass hanging down over Highway 5 there was no chance of stopping, so he aimed for the spot where he thought he would cause the least damage and brought down the overpass onto his truck. He said he survived "by millimeters."

          As night fell Saturday, about a dozen men and children sat around a bonfire in the remains of their homes in Curico, a town 122 miles (196 kilometers) south of the capital, Santiago.

          "We were sleeping when we felt the quake, very strongly. I got up and went out the door. When I looked back my bed was covered in rubble," said survivor Claudio Palma.

          In the capital Santiago, 200 miles (325 kilometers) to the northeast of the epicenter, the national Fine Arts Museum was badly damaged and an apartment building's two-story parking lot pancaked, smashing about 50 cars.

          Santiago's airport was closed and its subway shut down. Chile's main seaport, in Valparaiso, was ordered closed while damage was assessed. Two oil refineries shut down. The state-run Codelco, the world's largest copper producer, halted work at two of its mines, but said it expected them to resume operations quickly.

          The jolt set off a tsunami that swamped San Juan Bautista village on Robinson Crusoe Island off Chile, killing at least five people and leaving 11 missing, said Guillermo de la Masa, head of the government emergency bureau for the Valparaiso region.

          On the mainland, several huge waves inundated part of the major port city of Talcahuano, near hard-hit Concepcion. A large boat was swept more than a block inland.

          The surge of water raced across the Pacific, setting off alarm sirens in Hawaii, Polynesia and Tonga, but the tsunami waves proved small and did little damage as they reached as far as Japan.

          Robert Williams, a geophysicist at the US Geological Survey, said the Chilean quake was hundreds of times more powerful than Haiti's magnitude-7 quake, though it was deeper and cost far fewer lives.

          The largest earthquake ever recorded struck the same area of Chile on May 22, 1960. The magnitude-9.5 quake killed 1,655 people and made 2 million homeless. Saturday's quake matched a 1906 temblor off the Ecuadorean coast as the seventh-strongest ever recorded in the world.

          主站蜘蛛池模板: 亚洲国产日韩伦中文字幕| 国产成人亚洲日韩欧美| 国产精品高清一区二区三区| 国产蜜臀久久av一区二区| 日韩一区二区三区高清视频| 国产成人a在线观看视频免费| 欧乱色国产精品兔费视频 | 尹人香蕉久久99天天拍| 免费无码va一区二区三区| 欧美嫩交一区二区三区| 伊人色合天天久久综合网| 国产精品国产三级国av| 亚洲午夜av久久久精品影院| 国产精品女同一区二区久| 无码人妻丝袜在线视频| 精品久久久久久无码专区不卡| 91亚洲国产成人久久精品| 国产三级精品三级在线观看| 成人动漫综合网| 少妇激情av一区二区三区| 国产日产亚洲系列av| 精精国产XXX在线观看| 国产精品偷伦一区二区| 中文国产成人精品久久不卡 | 国产免费无遮挡吃奶视频| 最近国语高清免费观看视频| 麻豆蜜桃伦理一区二区三区| 99精品国产在热久久婷婷| 久久国产精品不只是精品| a毛片免费在线观看| 久久婷婷成人综合色综合| 国产二区三区不卡免费| 国产精一区二区黑人巨大| 激情综合网激情综合网五月| 99久久精品久久久久久婷婷| 国产精品国产三级国产试看| 在线观看AV永久免费| 骚片av蜜桃精品一区| 最近中文字幕2019免费| 亚洲天堂视频网| 精品无码国产污污污免费|