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Xia Xueyin, 9, her face badly bruised from a fall during last week's earthquake, takes photos of her family's damaged home Thursday in the town of Hanwang in China's southwest Sichuan province.
Xia Xueyin, 9, her face badly bruised from a fall during last week’s earthquake, takes photos of her family’s damaged home Thursday in the town of Hanwang in China’s southwest Sichuan province.
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BEICHUAN, China — Heavy equipment began toppling the few buildings left standing in this quake-stricken town once home to 30,000 people, and workers sprayed disinfectant Thursday in the silent streets amid roaming dogs and chickens.

Ten days after China’s worst disaster in a generation, it appeared the search for survivors — and even the dead — was giving way to the first steps toward reconstruction.

The smell of bleach in Beichuan was overpowering as workers in white suits and black rubber boots sprayed disinfectant on buildings, trees, car wheels and the soles of shoes of people leaving the town, where thousands are still likely buried. A layer of lime — used as a disinfectant to sprinkle on bodies — covered roads and any surface where corpses were yet to be recovered.

“There are no more signs of life,” said soldier Li Zichuan. He watched excavators demolishing what is left of the Beichuan Middle School, where residents say hundreds of students and teachers were killed.

“During the recovery operation, we dug many bodies up here, so now all that is left is to disinfect the place and then demolish it,” he said.

Rescuing trapped survivors was the first priority after the May 12 quake, and teams have pulled 33,434 people from the rubble alive, officials say.

Now, those efforts are at a standstill. No rescues have been reported since Wednesday.

Officials said today that the confirmed death toll in Sichuan province alone had risen to 55,239, an increase of nearly 14,000 in the past two days. Hundreds of people have also been confirmed dead in several provinces around Sichuan. The government put the overall number of dead and missing at more than 80,000. The homeless number 5 million, it said.

Health experts say corpses pose little direct threat of communicable diseases or contamination, although the misconception that they do is widespread.

“People are quite traumatized after an event like this, and they know that there are bodies underneath the rubble,” said Paul Garwood, spokesman for the World Health Organization. “So the disinfection measures provide reassurance and support.”

About 400,000 tents have been delivered to quake victims, and thousands of prefabricated huts have been erected. The need for more was urgent.

“We need more than 3.3 million tents,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told reporters Thursday.

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