Girl
Tells how She Went through Ordeal while Trapped
Source: Xinhua
A teenage girl has told how she and her classmates
sang pop songs together as they lay trapped
and injured in the ruins of their high school
after the massive earthquake in southwest China
on Monday.
Li Anning, 16, was among 360 children pulled
alive from the debris of the Beichuan No.1 Middle
School, in Beichuan County, Sichuan Province,
by noon on Thursday. More than 700 students
are still feared buried.
Li was trapped for 40 hours in the rubble of
the collapsed six-storey school building before
People's Liberation Army soldiers rescued her.
The senior high first grader at Beichuan No.1
Middle School told the Beijing News newspaper
how her class was in the middle of a geography
lesson when the tremors began.
"Our classroom on the fourth floor began
to shake suddenly and within no time, the fifth,
the fourth and third floors all collapsed together,"
said Li.
Through the dim light, Li saw the white shirt
of a boy classmate, Li Yuanfeng, who was lying
nearby.
"I grabbed one of Yuanfeng's hands, calling
out to him, but he didn't respond. In the beginning,
I could feel the warmth of his hand, but soon
it cooled," said Li.
Li was unable to move and began calling out
the names of her classmates one by one. Three
girls who had been friends with Li lay not far
away, but she could not reach them.
After about 10 hours trapped in the debris,
other teenagers started to shout out and then
began talking to each other.
"We have to keep going so we can get through
this," one teenager said.
Li said she could not remember who started,
but the trapped students later began to sing
pop songs, waiting patiently for rescuers to
help them.
"One line from Michael Wong's 'Fairytale'
song, which goes 'Let's write our ending together'
gave us strength and confidence, " she
said.
Li recalled screaming with the tremendous pain
of being pulled from the ruins on Wednesday
and carried by stretcher to safety.
She is being treated at the Mianyang City Central
Hospital.
Beichuan No.1 Middle School in Mianyang City
was about 160 kilometers northeast of the epicenter
in Wenchuan County.
The main building of the school collapsed when
the quake hit at about 2:30 p.m., burying 1,000
students and teachers. Yi Jie, director of the
earthquake control and relief headquarters in
Beichuan, said about 700 student are still believed
to be buried.
The headquarters would not give the figure
for the number of bodies so far recovered, but
Yi said they had beefed up rescue work.
A fire fighter from Yuzhong District, in neighboring
Chongqing Municipality, said his detachment
alone had rescued three survivors on Thursday
morning.
A man named Li Qi had been on the campus for
three straight days. His son, a student, was
believed to be among the buried.
"I could hear children's voices from under
the debris and I shouted to them 'Hold on! Help
has arrived!'" Li Qi said.
Rescuers from Chongqing, Shaanxi and Shenyang
joined the rescue operation on Wednesday.
About 80 percent of the buildings in the old
town area collapsed and almost 60 percent were
leveled in the new town area of the mountainous
county, about 160 kilometers northeast of the
epicenter Wenchuan.
The death toll in Beichuan was estimated at
up to 5,000, with 10,000 injured, according
to the latest information of the headquarters.
Beichuan, in the southwestern Sichuan Province,
was one of the areas hardest hit by the 7.8-magnitude
quake, China's worst in three decades.
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