Lying more than 50 km south of Wenchuan county, the epicenter of the deadly quake that hit Sichuan province on May 12, this township had seemed like a devastated battlefield in the early days of the disaster.
More than one month later, in a nationwide effort to pick up the pieces, Yingxiu is steadily on the road to reconstruction.
Mobile hospitals, temporary shelters and makeshift grocery stores peddling basic necessities have sprouted among the wide expanse of collapsed buildings, lending a semblance of a return to normal life.
Still, looking down at the town from the top of a hillside dubbed the "Tomb of Tens of Thousands of People" for the innumerable corpses found in Yingxiu and buried at the site, the images of death and destruction from a month ago came flooding back: heavy rains, landslide-blocked mountain roads and People's Liberation Army troops scrambling to save lives from piles of debris.
Captain Liu Huichao from the "Iron Army" division of the Jinan Military Area Command had trekked into Yingxiu on the evening of May 14.
The mission of his 90-strong company then: to search for survivors among the ruins and save them.
A month later, the 27-year-old said the soldiers are now tasked with disaster relief and reconstruction.
"Our army is still in Yingxiu," Liu said.
"But now we focus on helping quake victims build tents and makeshift homes."
Hardly any survivors are expected to be found as more than a month has passed since the quake struck, Liu said.
"But if any bodies are discovered, we will be responsible for treating them," he added.
Liu's mission yesterday alone was to deal with six bodies that were found beneath a landslide 5 km to the north of Yingxiu.
Together with 20 "Iron Army" soldiers, Liu trekked to the west bank of the Minjiang River that runs through the town. The troops took a boat to the east bank where the bodies were found.
Donning white, anti-infection coats, Liu's team arrived at the site at about 11 pm. Apart from six intact bodies, the soldiers found only the bones of six people.
Liu and his colleagues sterilized the bones and placed them in bags before burying the remains.
The soldiers who took part in the recovery mission were also disinfected. Standing in a row on the east bank of the Minjiang, a soldier sprayed disinfectant onto the hands and feet of the troops. They shed their white attire and burned those immediately. The site was finally cordoned off from the public.
Dealing with such daunting work for the past weeks, Liu has found it necessary to take his mind off the disaster.
"My wife told me she was pregnant earlier this month," he said.
"I am so happy, to be a father for the first time."
His surrounding colleagues were all smiles for the father-to-be.
"I was able to contact my wife, who is in Luoyang, Henan province, only once a week at the most before communication was cut off totally after I arrived here," Liu said.
"But now, I am able to call her every day. I am prepared to be stationed here for the long term, for reconstruction."
The damaged communications network was a major problem for Liu and quake victims. Most quake victims evacuated Yingxiu on foot to Chengdu, the provincial capital of Sichuan, as they felt that the risks were a better option to hunger and waiting for death in the isolated town.
Things got much better when roads were gradually repaired and reopened. With food and other supplies being sent into Yingxiu, many residents have decided to stay on in their hometown.
Setting up tents and temporary housing has become a daily task for Liu's "Iron Army".
Yang Hong, her husband and their 2-month-old son are early beneficiaries of the troops' efforts.
"We moved into this tent earlier this month," the 22-year-old mother said.
Her makeshift home, with the words "Only for Disaster Relief" printed on top, lies on a small hillside on the west of the township.
"Living conditions here are not bad, except for the summer heat," Yang said, her son wailing in her arms.
Her husband lay sleeping in their tent.
Asked about food supplies, Yang said it was no longer a problem with the roads reopened.
"We get stable food supplies from lorries coming from Chengdu. My husband carries barrels of water from a well down a hill as and when we need them," she said.
"There is sufficient milk powder for my son."
The real problem, Yang said, was the uncertain future facing her family.
"We have no idea what it is going to be like," she said, pointing to the area where her family's farmland lay buried under a landslide.
The road ahead for 53-year-old Wang Xueming is much clearer.
The migrant worker, who arrived in Yingxiu more than a year before the quake, is finished with the area.
Wang's house in Wenjiang county, within the western border of greater Chengdu, survived the quake without any serious injury.
Now putting up in the same shelter area as Yang, he cooks fresh meals every day for his co-workers and fellow quake victims.
"I won't work here anymore even after everything has passed," he said.
"Who knows? I may go to Shenzhen (in Guangdong province), or Shanghai, to find another job as long as the pay is guaranteed," he said.
"I can work anywhere, I am still strong."
Unlike Wang, many Yingxiu residents have decided to rebuild their lives in the area.
Dozens of grocery stores alone have reopened in tents along the Minjiang River.
Most hawk daily necessities including soap, toothpaste, instant noodles and bread.
A few shops display T-shirts with prints like "Yingxiu, Fight On!" that have become popular.
Wen Yan, who runs one such tent shop, smiled happily and waved the shirts proudly to passers-by.
Perhaps the most eye-catching temporary shop was a gray grocery store that lay on the west bank of the river.
"I have three grocery stores in Yingxiu," 43-year-old shopkeeper Zhou Changxue told China Daily.
"This is the only one in the township in a Russian tent."
The Wenjiang native opened his tent shop at the beginning of June.
Zhou, who broke his right leg in the quake, did not leave Yingxiu after the disaster hit because he believed that people here would go hungry in its aftermath.
"I have been in this business for more than 20 years," he said.
While a stable power supply is still a problem in the area, Zhou is considered one of the luckier ones because the authorities provided him with a generator for his shop, which is much larger than others, to open till late.
"My prices have remained the same as those prior to the quake," he said.
"Cigarettes and washing supplies such as soap and shampoo sell best," Zhou said.
The soldiers who are involved in the recovery work in the town are some of his biggest customers.
"They come frequently to stock up on necessities," he said.
Source: China Daily
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