Rescue
Equipment, Rrelief Goods Airdropped to Epicenter
Source: Xinhua
Chinese air forces succeeded for the first
time at 8:20 p.m. Thursday in airdropping "large-sized
rescue equipment" to Wenchuan, epicenter
of Monday's earthquake, according to military
sources.
The rescue equipment would improve the efficiency
of rescue missions carried out by the army,
the sources said, without identifying the equipment.
As of 6:50 p.m. Thursday, Chinese army and
armed police personnel had reached all 58 counties
and townships severely damaged in Monday's quake.
By midnight Thursday, the Chengdu Military
Area Command had used 34 helicopters to airdrop
145 tons of food, medicine and other emergency
relief goods to the quake-hit areas in 113 flights.
A total of 35 tourists from the United States
were also rescued by the helicopters.
In addition, the PLA dispatched a remote control
plane for surveillance of the quake-hit areas
centered on Wenchuan county, epicenter of Monday's
7.8-magnitude quake.
The remote control plane covered an area of
5,000 square kilometers during its 33-hour flight,
and send back over 2,800 gigabytes of imagery
data of 400 square kilometers of the quake-hit
areas by 10 p.m. Thursday.
The Chengdu Military Area Command has also
airdropped 50,000 packets of food, 25,000 pairs
of shoes, 5,000 cotton-padded quilts and 54,000
articles of clothing to epicenter Wenchuan and
its neighboring counties.
According to a decision by the disaster relief
headquarters of the State Council, 30 more transport
aircraft would be sent to these areas for disaster
relief operations including airdrops.
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