Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Travel News .




SHAKE AND BLOW
Quake shatters migrants' dream of better life for son
by Staff Writers
Lula, China (AFP) July 23, 2013


This picture taken on July 22, 2013 shows damaged houses after a pair of shallow earthquakes hit the area in Dingxi, in northwest China's Gansu province. Rescuers battled through dusty rubble on July 23 to try to reach victims of the two quakes in China that killed at least 89 people. Photo courtesy AFP.

Less than six months after Dong Kong's parents finally made the long journey to Shanghai to try to give him a better life, the boy was dead -- killed in China's twin earthquakes.

The seven-year-old's little corpse lay in a red coffin outside the ruins of the family home in Lula on Tuesday, high in the mountains of Gansu.

"Of course she cried when I told her he had died," said Kong's uncle Wang Pengfei, of the moment when he told his sister her only son was dead.

"Then she asked if we had recovered the body," he added, glaring at the wooden box holding his nephew, one of eight people killed in the village.

Lula is largely built from mud, from the shoulder-high walls that form narrow walkways to the foundations on which its humble houses stand.

It is a plentiful building material, another fruit of the dusty soil from which its 900-odd residents scrape a living. But when earthquake strikes it is a recipe for disaster, unable to withstand the shock.

Much of the Dong family home, passed down through generations as is typical in the Chinese countryside, was reduced to little more than piles of powder and bricks.

Weeks of heavy rain had already increased the risk of landslides, and Lula is part of Meichuan, the township worst hit by Monday's shallow 5.9- and 5.6-magnitude quakes which killed at least 94 people.

Tens of millions of China's rural residents have travelled thousands of kilometres to its booming eastern cities in recent decades in search of work and income.

Leaving their children behind -- Kong, who had a sister, lived with his grandfather -- they only see them once every 12 months, at the Lunar New Year.

It was only after the annual festivities this February that Kong's parents joined the exodus, and it was the last time they saw him alive.

"They had delayed leaving home for a long time, as they didn't want to leave their family, but they finally decided to go to Shanghai to make money after Chinese New Year," said his aunt Pu Huxia, sitting next to the coffin, surrounded by smouldering incense and candles.

"They had no choice but to go," she added quietly. "They had no money."

.


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






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SHAKE AND BLOW
At least 89 dead in China earthquakes: state media
Lanzhou, China (AFP) July 22, 2013
Rescuers battled through landslides and clogged roads in a bid to reach victims of twin earthquakes in northwest China Monday which killed 89 people, injured almost 600 and damaged more than 20,000 buildings. The tremors in Gansu province - with magnitudes of 5.9 and 5.6 - triggered landslides which buried often crudely constructed local houses, government-run broadcaster CCTV reported. ... read more


SHAKE AND BLOW
Both payloads for Arianespace's next Ariane 5 flight are now mated to the launcher

SpaceX Testing Complete at NASA Glenn's Renovated Facility

Alphasat stacks up

ESA Signs Off On Baseline Configuration Of Ariane 6

SHAKE AND BLOW
Ancient snowfall likely carved Martian valleys

Reports Detail Mars Rover Clues to Atmosphere's Past

MAVEN Spectrometer Opens Window to Red Planet's Past

Curiosity Mars Rover Passes Kilometer of Driving

SHAKE AND BLOW
First-ever lunar south pole mission could be attempted by 2016

Engine recovered from Atlantic confirmed as Apollo 11 unit

Soviet Moon rover moved farther than thought

Scientist says Earth may once have been orbited by two moons

SHAKE AND BLOW
SciTechTalk: Grab your erasers, there are more moons than we thought

NASA Hubble Finds New Neptune Moon

NASA finds new moon on Neptune

A Giant Moon for the Ninth Planet

SHAKE AND BLOW
Snow falling around infant solar system

'Water-Trapped' Worlds

A snow line in an infant solar system: Astronomers take first images

In the Zone: The Search For Habitable Planets

SHAKE AND BLOW
N. Korea halts work at long-range rocket site: website

Angular rate sensors at crashed Proton-M rocket were installed 'upside down'

Upside down sensor behind proton rocket explosion

NASA, Industry Test Additively Manufactured Rocket Engine Injector

SHAKE AND BLOW
China launches three experimental satellites

Medical quarantine over for Shenzhou-10 astronauts

China's astronauts ready for longer missions

Chinese probe reaches record height in space travel

SHAKE AND BLOW
Target Asteroid 2002 GT Tracked by European Teams

House vote shoots down plans for manned asteroid mission

A Timeline Of Comet ISON's Dangerous Journey

Senate Dems favor allowing NASA to go ahead with asteroid capture plan




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. 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 Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement