| China
Announces Three-day
Mourning for Quake Victims
(May 19-May 21,2008)
China on Monday began
a three-day national
mourning for the tens
of thousands of people
killed in a powerful
earthquake which struck
the country's southwest
on May 12.
At 4:58 a.m., the national
flag at the Tian'anmen
Square in downtown Beijing
flew at half-mast after
a complete flag-raising
ceremony.
About 2,600 people
watched the flag-raising
ceremony in the square.
All national flags
will fly at half-mast
at home and Chinese
diplomatic missions
abroad from Monday to
Wednesday. Public recreational
activities will be halted
during the mourning
period.
At 2:28 p.m. Monday,
Chinese citizens nationwide
will stand in silence
for three minutes to
mourn for the victims,
while air raid sirens
and horns of automobiles,
trains and ships will
wail in grief.
In the mourning period,
condolence books will
be opened in China's
Foreign Ministry and
Chinese embassies and
consulates around the
world.
The Beijing Olympic
torch relay will also
be suspended from Monday
to Wednesday.
The death toll from
the massive quake rose
to 32,476 nationwide
as of 2 p.m. Sunday,
while the injured numbered
220,109, according to
the emergency response
office under the State
Council.
Among the dead, 31,978
were in Sichuan alone
with the rest in six
other provinces and
a municipality.
The quake hit Wenchuan
County, Sichuan Province,
at 2:28 p.m. of May
12. Many other areas
were also affected.
The search, rescue and
disaster relief efforts
are continuing. Some
113,080 Chinese soldiers
and armed police have
been mobilized to help
with rescue operations.
Rescue teams from Russia,
the Republic of Korea,
Japan and Singapore,
as well as Taiwan and
Hong Kong regions, have
also joined in relief
efforts.
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