Taiwan resident loses life as tsunamis sweep resorts
28/12/2004 7:36
A Taiwan tourist has been confirmed dead in tsunami-hit Thailand,
according to sources in China's Foreign Ministry. No other casualties
involving Chinese citizens have been reported. Hong Kong Secretary for
Security Ambrose Lee said yesterday that 18 tourists from the Special
Administrative Region are receiving treatment in hospitals on southern
Thailand's Phuket Island, but everyone else is apparently safe. Lee said Hong
Kong tourist services have arranged return journeys for more than 1,200 SAR
residents who were vacationing in Phuket. Meanwhile, the Foreign Ministry and
Chinese embassies and consulates in the countries hit by Sunday's devastating
tsunamis are taking immediate action to extend assistance to Chinese citizens in
the affected areas. The Foreign Ministry set up a hot line (86-10-65963511)
yesterday for those seeking information about relatives and friends traveling in
the areas swept by the tidal waves. Authorities said yesterday that some
1,000 Chinese tourists remained stranded on Phuket and in the Maldives. The
China International Travel Service said that everyone who headed out on the
agency's travel packages to Southeast Asia are safe. Yang Weihong, of China
Travel International in Beijing, was quoted as saying the agency is ready to
cancel all travel packages to Southeast Asia nations scheduled to set off
tomorrow and return fees that have been collected. China announced that it
will offer 21.63 million yuan (US$2.7 million) in emergency humanitarian aid to
India, Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka and the Maldives. An Min, vice minister
of the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, told the Beijing diplomatic envoys of the
disaster-affected countries that the ministry is now preparing to deliver the
aid, including cash and relief material such as food and tents. A tremor
measuring 5.0 on the Richter scale jolted southwestern China's Yunnan Province
on the same day that the massive earthquake near the Indonesian island of
Sumatra triggered the killer tsunamis. No evidence has been found to suggest
the two quakes are related, officials said. (Xinhua)
Xinhua
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