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Schools closed for safety after Tibet quake

BEIJING
Tue Oct 7, 2008 6:16am EDT

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A woman carrying her child walks past collapsed buildings following an earthquake in Gedar Township of Damxung County, Tibet Autonomous Region, October 6, 2008 in this picture distributed by China's official Xinhua News Agency. REUTERS/Xinhua/Purbu Zhaxi

BEIJING (Reuters) - China closed schools in Tibet's capital for safety reasons on Tuesday a day after a huge earthquake struck to the west and months after hundreds of classrooms were flattened in a devastating quake in Sichuan.

World  |  China

The 6.6 magnitude Tibet earthquake, with an epicenter 50 miles west of Lhasa, killed at least nine people, state media reported, revising down an earlier estimated death toll of at least 30.

Nearly 200 homes were "toppled."

Most of the victims were women, children and elderly people, as men were away "mowing and storing forage grass for the winter," Xinhua news agency quoted a villager as saying.

"All schools in Lhasa were closed due to safety concerns," Xinhua said, adding that a total of 188 tremors hit the region -- including one strong quake above magnitude 6 and one above 5.

The May 12 earthquake in the mountainous southwestern province of Sichuan killed at least 80,000 people and devastated whole towns.

But in many areas, school buildings collapsed, killing children and teachers in their classrooms, while surrounding houses remained standing, prompting accusations of shoddy building and corruption.

(Reporting by Beijing newsroom; Writing by Nick Macfie; Editing by David Fox)



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