Chinese families trek for days to find quake victims
ROAD TO YINGXIU (Reuters) - On the buckled road to the epicenter of China's deadliest earthquake in decades, the stream of refugees fleeing collapsed homes and unburied corpses is almost outnumbered by a flow of anxious families trekking in.
The town of Wenchuan and hundreds of smaller settlements have been cut off from traffic and telephones since the massive tremor on Monday which Beijing say may have killed more than 50,000.
And hundreds of people desperate for news of their families have decided they can no longer bear the wait, even though they are ill-prepared for dangerous treks of up to 70 km (44 miles).
"I haven't heard from my husband since Monday. I need to know what happened to him," said teary De Chunli, struggling up a steep mountain path in the high heels and sequined outfit she was wearing when the quake leveled their house in nearby Dujiangyan -- which is at least still reachable by road.
"I'm worried he might be injured or need food," she added, undaunted by the dazed and injured refugees streaming past her from the town some 30 km away where her husband had been meeting a friend.
Those leaving warned that people were fighting over food, medicine and water in some of the worst hit towns -- but many hunting for loved ones seemed oblivious to the dangers ahead.
"We have enough water for one day, after that we'll just have to see," said Chen Fubin, who had rushed from her home by the coast to try and find her parents in Wenchuan -- at least two days' walk away along a road littered with broken bridges, landslides and rivers swollen by torrential rain.
Almost no one had brought tents, though aftershocks make sleeping in the few buildings left standing a dangerous gamble, and blocked roads meant many of those trying to reach more distant towns and villages were making the trip in vain. Continued...



