CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand: HUNDREDS of rescuers swarmed over twisted  and smoking buildings on Wednesday in a frantic search for survivors  after New Zealand’s catastrophic earthquake left nearly 400 dead or  missing.
      Emergency services cordoned off central Christchurch, which was  devastated by Tuesday’s shallow, 6.3-magnitude tremor, to hunt for  anyone still alive along with an unknown number of bodies buried in the  rubble.
     Prime Minister John Key declared a national emergency as 75 bodies  were recovered, while about 30 people were rescued overnight. About 300  people are still missing following New Zealand’s worst natural disaster  in 80 years.
     Key said the quake had “wreaked death and destruction on a dreadful  scale” in the country’s second biggest city, six months after a  7-magnitude quake shook buildings violently in Christchurch but  miraculously caused no deaths.
     The latest tremor toppled many buildings and left central  Christchurch strewn with debris. The city’s landmark cathedral lost its  spire. Dozens of aftershocks rocked the city, much of which was without  power and water.
     Rescuers had to amputate limbs to free some survivors, but abandoned  hope for any victims trapped in the flattened CTV building, which housed  a school for foreign English-language students.
     Twenty-four Japanese citizens were among the missing, including 11  students who were studying at the King’s Education College inside the  six-story CTV building, along with a South Korean brother and sister in  their early 20s.
     Police Supt. Russell Gibson warned that the toll was certain to rise  as more than 500 emergency workers combed through shattered buildings,  listening out for tapping, shouting and other signs of life. Some rescue efforts were frustrated by a two-block exclusion zone  around the city’s tallest hotel, the Grand Chancellor, as the 26-story  building leaned precariously and looked close to collapse.
     But there was applause when a woman wrapped in blankets emerged from  the Pyne Gould Corp. building, some 24 hours after the quake rocked busy  lunchtime streets at about 12:50 p.m. on Tuesday. The clock is ticking for those trapped, though, with New Zealand’s  emergency management chief John Hamilton saying that rescuers may have  just two or three days to pull out anyone still alive.
     The quake was the deadliest to hit New Zealand since 256 people died  in a 1931 tremor, and Key’s declaration of a state of emergency will  free up national resources to focus on Christchurch. Leading disaster modelling company AIR Worldwide said that the  earthquake would cost the insurance industry up to NZ$11.5 billion ($8.6  billion).
      Specialist teams from Australia, Britain, Japan, Singapore, South  Korea, Taiwan and the United States were due to join the rescue  operation as an international effort swung into action. New Zealand sits on the “Pacific Ring of Fire,” a vast zone of  seismic and volcanic activity stretching from Chile on one side to Japan  and Indonesia on the other.
      Seismologists said that despite being smaller, the latest tremor was  more destructive than the September quake because it was nearer to  Christchurch’s center and much closer to the earth’s surface.        


 
 
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