CHINA> Focus
    From Tangshan to Wenchuan: A fault line through China
    (Xinhua)
    Updated: 2008-06-16 15:54

    BEIJING -- Following the 8.0-magnitude earthquake that rocked southwest China on May 12, a young woman sent her own shockwaves through the Internet.

    Under the name "Post-90 Xiao Yun", she uploaded about 10 intimate photos of herself, including some in which she was  completely nude, on to www.tianya.cn, one of the country's leading online communities. They were posted with an appeal to the public to donate to the quake relief effort.

    Xiao Yun, who claimed to be 19 and a native of Sichuan Province living in Beijing, wrote that she was a student and was pleased to see people across the country helping Sichuan. She called for  further donations and promised more photos as an incentive.

    The move caused a public uproar and wide divisions.

    Whether her behavior was proper or not is open to debate, but  it serves as an extreme example of how greatly Chinese society has changed since the Tangshan earthquake in 1976.

    DENOUNCING DENG IN THE RUBBLE

    On July 28, 1976, towards the end of the 10-year Cultural Revolution (1966-1976), the industrial city Tangshan, 150 km east of Beijing, was torn apart by a 7.8-magnitude earthquake.

    Yu Pei, a Beijing resident then aged 22, hurriedly set up a temporary shelter with his neighbors at a downtown stadium. Nationwide, almost 400 million frightened people abandoned their homes for rough shelters.


    Part of a railway was warped by the quake in Tangshan, Hebei province in 1976. [File photo]

    In these emergency shanty towns, slogans such as "Denounce Deng while conducting disaster relief" were ubiquitous. They referred to the future Chinese leader and author of the country's reform and opening up, Deng Xiaoping, who had been rehabilitated in 1973, but was still under attack from his political rivals as an alleged inciter of mass protests.

    Posters and paintings of these slogans were everywhere; reminders that revolutionary class struggle was still the primary mission for China.

    So there were few reports about the rescue and relief work by troops and members of the public. The media reported instead how people in quake-ravaged Tangshan held "denouncing-Deng meetings" in the rubble.

    "At the time, there were all kinds of rumors and it was really hard to know what was true. People were scared and upset," recalls Yu Pei, now 54, a specialist in world history at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

    The Tangshan earthquake claimed more than 240,000 lives. But the death toll was only revealed three years later, after Deng took power.

    Zhang Jianping, author of "The Fault Line", a book about the Tangshan earthquake, says the recovery of individual and family life following the tremor was seldom mentioned in public or in the media.

    The primary goals and issues at the time were to "restore production of coal, steel and porcelain as soon as possible", says Zhang, who then served in the Air Force of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) in Tangshan. The industrial city was known for coal, steel and porcelain.

    Traditional Chinese values have long held that individuals should, if necessary, sacrifice themselves for the collective and  national good.

    But during the Tangshan earthquake, under the reins of the  ultra-left, individual interests and values were neglected, and  everything was subject to the needs of the "class struggle".

    PUTTING PEOPLE FIRST

    Thirty-two years later, after the more powerful earthquake, centered in the mountainous town Wenchuan, people in China and  around the world saw a Chinese society coming to terms with many "firsts".

    Within minutes, the government announced the disaster and made a swift response. President Hu Jintao told the country that saving lives was the top priority, ordering all-out efforts to help survivors.


    Earthquake survirors walk outside shelters in Dujiangyan, May 19, 2008. The quake has made thousands of people homeless in Sichuan.  [Agencies]

    Just three hours later, Premier Wen Jiabao flew into Sichuan on a hastily-prepared flight and stood among the debris. "As long as there is a glimmer of hope, we should pull out all the stops," he told PLA troops and other rescuers.  

    Three days later, the quake relief headquarters under Wen's command estimated that more than 50,000 were feared dead. It was the first ever Chinese government announcement of an estimated death toll from a major disaster.

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