Prevention of secondary disasters, such as landslides and mud-rock flows,
amid rain storms and frequent aftershocks following the May 12 earthquake was an
"urgent task", said the quake relief headquarters of China's State Council
yesterday.
"New geological disasters can happen at any time due to the long-lasting
aftershocks and much stronger precipitation as the country's rivers enter the
flooding season," the headquarters warned after a meeting presided by Premier
Wen Jiabao.
The quake zone and the rain-lashed southern regions are the focuses of the
prevention work, according to the meeting.
Work must be sped up to remove the dangers of quake-formed lakes,
quake-damaged dams and hydropower plants as well as dikes of major rivers, the
headquarters said.
The headquarters urged local governments and related departments to
strengthen monitoring and alarms of rains, floods and aftershocks, and told
quake-hit regions to base their recovery plans on geological hazard assessment.
Up to 50,000 residents were asked last week to move from highly-dangerous
terrain in Wenchuan, epicenter of the May 12 earthquake, to shelters built on
open and solid ground before June30 to avoid secondary disasters.
As of Monday noon, 12,437 aftershocks had been detected since the
8.0-magnitude quake struck southwest Sichuan Province, official figures show.
By Sunday, at least 57 people had been killed and 1.27 million people
relocated as rainstorms and floods ravaged nine provinces and region in south
China.