新西兰地震后的救灾工作
Office workers in Christchurch suddenly were thrown into an unimaginable and chaotic situation. Todd Lynch was among scores of people who escaped their crumbled offices. "God I do not really know what happened, and then I heard some people screaming out which are on the second and third floor and managed to pull them out," he said.
More than 100 people, including as many as 12 visiting Japanese students, were thought to be trapped underneath rubble as drizzling rain fell on the city at nightfall.
New Zealand's Civil Defense Minister John Carter says teams from other areas are converging on Christchurch. "The search and rescue teams from New Plymouth and Auckland will be down and operating in the next four or five hours, and of course the police in the meantime already have teams of people out there working to go through the damage to try and help and assist where they can," he said.
"I do not think we can go past the fact that we may well be witnessing New Zealand's darkest day. The advice I have had at the moment, I think the viewers will understand and appreciate that it's very fluid advice at the moment, but the death toll I have at the moment is 65, and that may rise. So look it is an absolute tragedy for this city, for New Zealand, for the people we care so much about. And it is a terrifying time for the people," he said.
Rescue crews with sniffer dogs fanned out across the city in search of survivors, some of whom sent desperate text messages and made cell phone calls from under the wreckage of the 6.3-magnitude quake.
Toby is a survivor who was trapped for several hours in a collapsed building before he was pulled to safety. "I was banging on the metal yelling out 'help' because my voice was better than theirs. Luckily one of them got out before me," he said.
His mother Tania was nearby and relieved to be reunited with her son. "From where he was on the fourth floor, really I thought he was gone. But I chose not to leave here, until I knew for myself that he is alright," she said.
Television footage showed several multi-story buildings that fell in on themselves or into the streets, as well as the collapse of the Christchurch Cathedral, whose stone spire crumbled into a city square. Rescue workers say they believe people were in the tower at the time.
Helicopters were seen fighting fires and plucking stranded workers from the roofs of high-rise office towers.
Domestic flights were disrupted at New Zealand's Auckland airport stranding hundreds of travelers, many who were taking the delays in stride.
"I just said to that lady, that I got my book, it could be awhile, but I see we're lucky compared with, you know, not complaining,"said one woman.
The earthquake, which struck at midday Tuesday, was the second to hit Christchurch in the past five months. The city came through a 7.1-magnitude quake in September without loss of life. But seismologists said Tuesday's quake struck closer to the city and much closer to the surface, making it far more intense.
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