STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- 180 are dead and 24 others are missing, authorities say
- More than 11,200 people are reported to have been injured
- Chinese Premier Li Keqiang travels to the area
- The quake struck about 70 miles from the city of Chengdu in Sichuan
Thousands of emergency
workers, including soldiers, rushed to reach the affected zones in the
hilly region, but their progress was impeded.
"Huge chucks of the
mountain in certain areas have sheared off and fallen into the valleys,"
CNN's David McKenzie reported from near the quake's epicenter in
Lushan. "Big boulders have landed onto the roads, making emergency work
difficult."
Severe structural damage with some buildings flattened was evident in Lushan.
Xu Mengjia, the Communist
Party chief of Ya'an, the city that administers the area where the
quake struck, told state broadcaster CCTV that because of landslides and
disruption to communications, determining the total number of
casualties may take some time.
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang traveled to the area from Beijing on Saturday, state media reported.
Quake strikes China's Sichuan province.
See earthquake rattle China
The quake struck just
after 8 a.m. local time Saturday, about 115 kilometers (70 miles) away
from the provincial capital, Chengdu, at a depth of around 12
kilometers, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. There was
conflicting information about the earthquake's strength, with the USGS
putting the magnitude at 6.6 and the China Earthquake Networks Center
gauging it at 7.0.
It was followed by a series of aftershocks, some of them as strong as magnitude 5.1, the USGS said.
Authorities have
responded by sending rescue workers to the area around the epicenter,
briefly halting flights at the airport in Chengdu and suspending
high-speed rail operations, state media reported.
"There's definitely a
huge government response -- soldiers driving past me now," McKenzie
said. "Triage centers have been set up by the government and the Red
Cross."
The event stirred memories of the devastating earthquake that hit Sichuan in 2008, killing more than 87,000 people.
First responders to
Saturday's quake reported that the damage caused didn't appear to be as
severe as what was seen in the aftermath of the 2008 disaster, according
to CCTV.
Fan Xiaodong, a student in Chengdu, said when the tremors began to shake buildings in the city, many of his startled classmates rushed out of their dorms, some of them wearing only the clothes they'd been sleeping in.
At first, Fan said, he only felt a slight trembling as he dozed in bed.
"I thought it was my
roommates shaking the bed," he said. "But the shock became stronger
soon, and it came to me that an earthquake happened."
The epicenter was in
Lushan country, a district of Ya'an. That area is home to China's famous
giant pandas and houses the country's biggest panda research center.
CCTV reported that the pandas at the facility, which is about 40 kilometers (about 25 miles) from the epicenter, were safe.
Residents of Chongqing, a
sprawling metropolis more than 300 kilometers (about 190 miles) from
Ya'an, said the quake also shook buildings there.
CNN's David McKenzie reported and from Lushan, China. CNN's Ed Payne reported from Atlanta.
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