Space Travel News  
SHAKE AND BLOW
No signs of life as NZ quake toll rises to 113

by Staff Writers
Christchurch, New Zealand (AFP) Feb 25, 2011
Rescuers scouring Christchurch's earthquake-devastated ruins for survivors said there were no signs of life Friday, as the death toll climbed to 113.

"These are very, very dark days for New Zealand," Prime Minister John Key said, adding that rescue crews refused to give up hope people remained alive in the debris three days after Tuesday's 6.3 magnitude quake.

"We need a bit a bit of luck to try and find a few people that may still have survived this earthquake and are still trapped in those buildings," he told Radio New Zealand.

Police said 113 bodies had been retrieved from the rubble and were lying in a temporary morgue, without updating the figure of 228 listed as missing.

"There have been no rescues overnight, the body count continues to rise," Superintendent Russell Gibson told TVNZ.

Rescuers have ruled out finding survivors at Christchurch's landmark cathedral, which lost its spire and where up to 22 people could be buried.

They also do not believe anyone remains alive under the collapsed CTV building, which housed a TV station and a busy language school for foreign students, and where as many as 120 people may have perished.

In a glimmer of hope amid the pall of misery hanging over Christchurch, Gibson said international search and rescue specialists who had flown in to help the rescue effort had told him not to remain optimistic.

"The (rescuers) -- from Australia, from Japan -- all tell me that they have worked on buildings which look just like the CTV building and many days after the collapse they continue to pull people out," he said.

But Civil Defence Minister John Carter warned the toll would rise, possibly sharply, as emergency crews who had been concentrating on the worst-hit buildings in the city centre fanned out into other areas.

"They are now going into places such as alleyways where people would have been coming back and forward from work to go to lunch, where they suspect that there are people under the rubble of the facades... that may be dead," he told reporters.

Police have cordoned off the city centre as they use sniffer dogs, purpose-built cameras and listening devices in the hunt for survivors. The last survivor was pulled out of the rubble on Wednesday.

They have also vowed to crack down on criminals after about a dozen cases of post-quake looting in Christchurch, with Gibson saying he was "sickened" by thieves who had tried to gain access to properties by impersonating rescuers.

On Thursday authorities released the first names of quake victims, listing four people including two babies aged five months and nine months.

Japan said at least 26 of its citizens who had attended the foreign language school in the CTV building school were missing. Twenty Chinese students were unaccounted for, state television in China reported.

Twelve Filipinos were believed to have been inside the CTV building, along with a South Korean brother and sister who were also listed as missing. Their father arrived in Christchurch Thursday to search for the pair.

"My son and daughter must be alive," said 57-year-old Yoo Sang-cheol, according to South Korean news agency Yonhap.

"I hear that some of the injured people have not yet been identified, so I'm going to go to the hospitals immediately," he said. "I'm certain that my son and daughter will be among them," he said as he burst into tears.

Two British nationals are also known to have died, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office said, adding that next of kin have been notified.

Japanese search-and-rescue experts were on the scene and combing the CTV site in the shadow of the listing, 26-storey Grand Chancellor Hotel, Christchurch's tallest building, which was at risk of collapse.

"This is not just New Zealand's tragedy, it is an international tragedy," New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully said.

Power has been restored to much of the city, but many people remain without water. Thousands of residents, rattled by numerous tremors in recent months, have been staying with friends and relatives elsewhere.

Christchurch was hit by a 7.0-magnitude earthquake in September, which damaged 100,000 buildings but miraculously caused no deaths. New Zealand has not suffered such a disaster since 256 people died in a 1931 quake.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
When the Earth Quakes
A world of storm and tempest



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


SHAKE AND BLOW
N. Zealand quake another blow to faltering economy
Christchurch, New Zealand (AFP) Feb 24, 2011
The massive damage from New Zealand's earthquake is likely to hobble growth in an economy already teetering on the brink of recession, analysts say. The repair bill facing the second city Christchurch after its second major quake in six months was estimated at up to NZ$11.5 billion ($8.6 billion) by US firm AIR Worldwide, which specialises in disaster modelling. Another assessment from J ... read more







SHAKE AND BLOW
SpaceX to focus on astronaut capsule

ILS Appoints Vice President Of Sales Marketing And Communications

Ariane 5's Mission With The Automated Transfer Vehicle Is Postponed

Ariane 5 Ready For Launch Of Automated Transfer Vehicle Johannes Kepler

SHAKE AND BLOW
Advanced NASA Instrument Gets Close-up On Mars Rocks

Good Health Report After Hiatus In Communications

Experiment volunteers take 2nd 'walk on Mars'

Walking On Mars

SHAKE AND BLOW
84 Student Teams Set to Roll At 18th Annual NASA Great Moonbuggy Race

Google Lunar X Prize Roster Reaches 29 Teams

Waiter, There's Metal In My Moon Water

Japan eyes humanoid robot mission in space

SHAKE AND BLOW
Can WISE Find The Hypothetical Tyche In Distant Oort Cloud

Theory: Solar system has another planet

Launch Plus Five Years: A Ways Traveled, A Ways To Go

Mission To Pluto And Beyond Marks 10 Years Since Project Inception

SHAKE AND BLOW
'Wandering' planets may have water, life

Back To The Roots Of The Solar System

Direct Images Of Disks Unravel Mystery Of Planet Formation

New Instrument Will Help Confirm Kepler Planet Finds

SHAKE AND BLOW
University of Ulster Launches Rocket Project with Japan Space Agency

ATK And Astrium Unveil Liberty Rocket For NASA CCDev-2 Competition

Renewed Call For Competitive US Spaceflight Marketplace

Rocket Team Hot Fire AJ26 Flight Engine For Taurus II

SHAKE AND BLOW
China Mars probe set for November launch

Shenzhou 8 Mission Could Top Three Weeks

U.S. wary of China space weapons

Slow progress in U.S.-China space efforts

SHAKE AND BLOW
NASA Releases Images Of Man-Made Crater On Comet

Spectacular Flyby Of Comet Tempel 1 Tests Lockheed Built Spacecraft

NASA'S Stardust Spacecraft Completes Comet Flyby

NASA spacecraft unravels comet mystery


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement