China: New buildings withstood latest earthquake
BEIJING — No buildings constructed after a powerful earthquake struck southwest China in 2008 collapsed fully during last week’s quake in the same province, which means they withstood a major test, an official said today.
Poor designs and shoddy construction were blamed for the collapse of many schools during the Sichuan earthquake five years ago which left nearly 90,000 people dead or missing. To assuage public anger, central and local government officials in Sichuan province promised then not to cut corners in the reconstruction and to enforce higher safety codes.
Today, an official from Sichuan government’s Housing and Urban-Rural Development Department said the new construction had withstood last week’s earthquake, which was smaller in magnitude and killed 196 people and left 21 people missing.
About 1,500 people are still hospitalized following the earthquake, according to figures provided by Zhao Miao, Sichuan’s vice governor.
He said Saturday’s earthquake affected more than 2 million people in more than 100 counties in 10 cities and caused “great economic losses and ecological damage.”
Saturday’s earthquake was measured by Chinese authorities at magnitude 7.0 and by the U.S. Geological Survey at 6.6, capable of causing severe damage and yet substantially smaller than the 2008 quake, measured at 8.0 by Chinese authorities and 7.9 by the USGS.
