This picture taken on April 21, 2018 shows the destroyed Xuankou Middle School, the memorial site for the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, in Yingxiu near Beichuan in Sichuan province. The city of Beichuan has been kept frozen in time since May 12, 2008, when a 8.0-magnitude earthquake killed 80,000 people across Sichuan province. Photo: AFP
This picture taken on April 21, 2018 shows the destroyed Xuankou Middle School, the memorial site for the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, in Yingxiu near Beichuan in Sichuan province. The city of Beichuan has been kept frozen in time since May 12, 2008, when a 8.0-magnitude earthquake killed 80,000 people across Sichuan province. Photo: AFP

Inside China: Sichuan earthquake, 10 years on

  • A decade on, we return to the scene of one of China's worst natural disasters.

This picture taken on April 21, 2018 shows the destroyed Xuankou Middle School, the memorial site for the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, in Yingxiu near Beichuan in Sichuan province. The city of Beichuan has been kept frozen in time since May 12, 2008, when a 8.0-magnitude earthquake killed 80,000 people across Sichuan province. Photo: AFP
This picture taken on April 21, 2018 shows the destroyed Xuankou Middle School, the memorial site for the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, in Yingxiu near Beichuan in Sichuan province. The city of Beichuan has been kept frozen in time since May 12, 2008, when a 8.0-magnitude earthquake killed 80,000 people across Sichuan province. Photo: AFP

South China Morning Post reports on the scene of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake upon the tenth anniversary of one of China's worst natural disasters.

Presenter: Mimi Lau

Voices: Bong Miquiabas, Naomi Ng, Alan Wong

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Producers: Jarrod Watt, James Legge

Mimi Lau

Mimi Lau

Mimi Lau covers human rights, religion and civil society in China. She spent seven years in southern China as the Post's Guangzhou Correspondent before returning to Hong Kong in 2017. Today, Mimi continues to pursue stories across the country, monitoring and reporting on key political and civil issues. She has won numerous awards for her work.

Jarrod Watt

Jarrod Watt

Jarrod Watt joined the Post in 2015 after more than a decade working as a multi-platform reporter and editor with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, creating video, radio and text stories. He currently produces podcasts and video, as well as developing new digital storytelling methods, including augmented reality and 360 interactive photography.

James Legge

James Legge

James Legge is a former sub-editor on the Post's Hong Kong desk. Before that, he was a reporter and editor in the UK and a freelance reporter in Hong Kong.