Rescue work suspended after 36 bodies found at Tibet landslide site

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Rescuers work at the site of a landslide that buried 83 miners in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, April 1, 2013. (Xinhua/Liu Kun).

Rescue work at the site of a landslide that buried 83 miners in southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region was suspended on Monday for fear of further slides.

By Monday afternoon, rescuers had retrieved 36 bodies from the site of the massive landslide, which happened on Friday.

Rescue work was later suspended after geological experts found four cracks with lengths of more than 600 meters on the mountain top, posing risks of a subsequent landslide.

Rescuers were asked to retreat to the safe zone and wait for monitoring and evaluation from relevant departments.

More than 4,500 rescuers and 200 machines were working at the site to find the buried miners, said a spokesman with the rescue headquarters. Intermittent snow at the site, however, was hampering rescue efforts,

**83 workers trapped **

The landslide struck a workers' camp of the Jiama Copper Polymetallic Mine around 6 a.m. on Friday, burying 83 workers and 11 pieces of machinery from Tibet Huatailong Mining Development Co. Ltd., a subsidiary of China National Gold Group Corporation, the country's largest gold producer.

The identities of the miners have been confirmed and their relatives are also on their way to Lhasa. The majority of the victims were from geological institutes or mining companies from northwestern Gansu Province, southwestern Guizhou Province and Lhasa.

"Large swathes of rocks suddenly fell down from the mountaintop and the huge sound could be heard in the whole valley. It was a terrible scene," remembered a villager living nearby.

Zhao Linjiang is the camp's only survivor of the disaster.

He went down the mountain to buy tents on Wednesday, and was shocked to find, when he returned on Friday morning, that the camp had totally gone, burying his younger brother Zhao Malin and other miners.

"I was numbed by the scene, and trudged back and forth, crying all along," Zhao told Xinhua in Lhasa on Sunday.

"It's so cozy here, but my brother is so cold up there on the mountain," he said, wiping tears off his face.

Zhao said he must wait to see his brother, or even his body, before he returns home to be with his family.

"I won't return to this place any more," he added.

**Unprecedented difficulties in rescue operation **

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang on Friday ordered exhaustive efforts to rescue the buried workers

On Saturday, rescuers managed to recover two bodies in the same area, as the huge amount of debris, 4,600-meter altitude and snowy weather hampered rescue efforts.

Xinhua reporters saw at the scene on Sunday that more heavy-duty excavating devices were being transported to the site, where at least 50 excavating machines were working on the debris. Roads near the landslide site have been widened to facilitate the shipping of the equipment.

Despite suffering from altitude sickness, soldiers and armed policemen have been racing against time to sift through the debris in the hope of finding buried miners.

They have been digging in shifts, while the machines ran day and night without any stop.

Rescue workers conduct search and rescue work at the site where a large-scale landslide hit a mining area in Maizhokunggar County of Lhasa, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 30, 2013.

"I have barely had any sleep since I came here," armed policeman Lu Wenkai told Xinhua.

"Apart from eating and sleep, I have been working all the time since I arrived here on early yesterday morning," said another soldier, who did not give his name.

"I am tormented with a headache but I have to continue my work," he added.

"We have no plan to stop the rescue operation. Instead, we have sped up our rescue efforts with more devices," said Xiang Mingqing, another armed police officer at the scene.

Disease control and prevention workers have disinfected the area, and a checkout showed that air conditions at the site remained normal.

Rescuers eat lunch amid snow at the site of a landslide that buried 83 miners in Maizhokunggar County, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, April 1, 2013.

"There are cracks on the mountaintop and secondary disasters are possible," said Jiang Yi, an armed police officer who joined the rescue efforts at the scene.

A special team of experts has been formed to monitor the mountain around the clock and three walls built at the landslide site to guard against secondary disasters.

"We have treated rescuers who suffered altitude sickness or a fever due to the snowy weather," according to Li Suzhi, president of the General Hospital of Tibetan Military Area Command. Li, leading a team of more than 40 members, arrived at the site on Saturday afternoon.

Local villagers have also tried to send hot food to the rescuers.

Some 3,500 rescuers, 300 large-scale pieces of machinery, 10 sniffer dogs and 20 life detectors, have been mobilized at the site, according to the rescue headquarters.

"No life signs have been detected after the search via life detectors, snigger dogs and other technological means," said Li Yuelin, a rescue expert from northwestern Gansu Province.

Around 2 million cubic meters of rock and earth was set loose by the landslide, with the material taking up a length of more than three km and a depth ranging from 20 meters to 50 meters, according to Li.

Wang Zenghua, a senior leader of Tibet Autonomous Region's firefighting authorities, said the difficulties in the rescue operation were unprecedented in his 25 years of work in the region.

"The large volume of rock and mud displaced miners' tents, making it impossible to locate the missing," he said. "Completing the excavation and removal of debris is also unlikely in a short time given its depth."

As of 6 p.m. on Sunday, around 1.05 million cubic meters of debris had been combed.

"We will carry out an in-depth investigation into the exact cause of the landslide," promised Yang Dongliang, head of the State Administration of Work Safety, who arrived at the landslide site on Saturday.

Yang said the probe had begun and the final results will be made public. Experts with the Ministry of Land and Resources and the regional government have arrived at the scene.

"As long as there is a glimmer of hope, we will never give up our rescue efforts," said Yang.