Chinese authorities raced to rescue more than 250 workers trapped in a dam in the mountainous terrain of northern Nepal before they run out of food.
The Chinese-backed Rasuwagadhi Hydropower station was “severely damaged” in the 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck on April 25, according to state-owned China Three Gorges Co., the country’s largest hydroelectric company. All roads to the dam are cut off, it said in a statement.
The trapped workers have enough food to last only two more days, the company said, adding that two employees were killed in the quake and several others are injured. China is seeking to rescue them with the involvement of the regional government of Tibet and the People’s Liberation Army’s Chengdu Command, according to the statement.
More than 4,300 people have been killed in Nepal’s worst earthquake in eight decades. China has invested billions to harness its southern neighbor’s vast hydropower resources, a major component of the increasing Chinese financial assistance to the poor mountainous country.
Rasuwagadhi, located about 67.5 kilometers from the quake epicenter, is one of three dams in Nepal being built by Three Gorges Corp., according to the company’s website. It will have a capacity of 111 megawatts when complete, the company said.
No deaths or damage was reported on the company’s other two dams in Nepal. Ting Shi
air force planes transport earthquake aid
Four PLA IL-76 Air Force planes left an airport in Chengdu for Kathmandu yesterday, carrying around 90 tones of humanitarian aid, military sources said. The materials, including tents, blankets and power generators, are the first batch of 180 tones of goods offered by the Chinese government, according to a yesterday statement from the Ministry of National Defense. The Chinese government has pledged to provide 20million yuan (USD3.4 million) worth of humanitarian aid to Nepal. The rest would be transported in the following days, according to the statement.
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