More than 10,000 people are believe to be trapped in rubble |
China has announced three days of mourning for the tens of thousands of victims of Monday's earthquake.
It will begin with a three-minute silence at 1428 (0628 GMT), exactly a week after the quake struck the south-western Sichuan province.
The Olympic torch relay will also be suspended for three days.
The number of confirmed deaths has now risen to 32,477, but officials say the final toll may reach 50,000. More than 220,000 people have been injured.
Chinese President Hu Jintao has expressed gratitude for the international help with relief efforts following the magnitude 7.9 quake.
QUAKE STATISTICS Up to Sunday 18 May: 32,477 dead 220,109 injured 145 aftershocks above level 4, 23 above level 5, biggest 6.1 34,000 medical staff in quake zone 181,460 tents, 220,000 quilts despatched 6bn Chinese yuan ($860m, £440m) received in donations, from China and abroad Drinking water for 7m people restored Source: Chinese government |
Offers of help in the relief effort from home and abroad have now surpassed $860m (£440m), Chinese officials say.
The first aid supplied by the US has arrived, with an air force plane loaded with tents, lanterns and 15,000 meals landing in Sichuan's provincial capital, Chengdu.
However, a British rescue team standing by in Hong Kong is returning home after being refused permission to travel to the earthquake zone.
Rescue efforts have resumed in Beichuan, after the city was evacuated amid fears that it could be engulfed by a river bursting its banks.
The city, which lies near the epicentre of the quake, was reduced to ruins.
Aftershocks
Three giant pandas are missing from the Wolong Nature Reserve, Xinhua reports. All the pandas at the reserve were initially reported safe.
There are still stories of survivors being pulled from the rubble.
One man who was rescued on Sunday, Tang Xiong, had only had slight bruises and was conscious when he was rescued in Beichuan county 139 hours after the quake, Xinhua said.
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