Review: 'China's Unnatural Disaster: The Tears of Sichuan Province'
May 7, 2009 | 4:00
am
As all over Sichuan Province, schools filled with students collapsed while other buildings remained standing, grief-stricken parents demanded help from the government, help that never came. First emergency teams were routed away from smaller towns and villages where parents could hear children crying for help from beneath the debris. A fortunate few were able to actually dig their children out, others eventually found the corpses of their children (and were told to bury them themselves) but many were left with only the heaps of brick and dust to serve as a mass grave.
Unflinchingly, Jon Alpert and Matthew O'Neil, who began filming weeks after the catastrophe, revisit that horrible day, capturing the makeshift memorials, the backyard graves, the bottomless grief of parents -- many of whom lost their only child.
Sadness quickly turned to anger and from that a slender thread of narrative emerges. As parents comb through the remains of the schools, it becomes clear that many were built with little attention to safety codes. In some places, bricks are merely piled on bricks, with the merest film of mortar; in others structural reinforcement seemed suspiciously slight. In another town, a school was turned into a warehouse and all the students moved to another building, which later collapsed -- but the school-turned-warehouse stood.
The government's only response is a payment of $317 per child killed.
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(Photo courtesy HBO)



Why the west treats China as evil and it is actually a victim from the Opium War, WW2, Mao's disasters and all the natural disasters?
Posted by: TonyP4 | May 12, 2009 at 08:12 AM