Money pours in for victims of tsunamis
3/1/2005 7:27
Bombarded with devastating TV images of tsunami-ravaged South and Southeast
Asian countries and a rising death toll, Zhou Jin, 78, rushed to a donation
center in Beijing on Saturday and left 1,800 yuan (US$217). "I am too old to
have many expenses. Here is the cash I have with me. Take it and make use of it
for the needy there," Zhou told civil affairs official Zhang Ye. When asked
about why she gave away all her cash, Zhou said she was not fishing for fame.
"The catastrophe has left me in low spirits for so many days. I wish I could do
something and here comes the chance." Since the donation center in the Yuetan
neighborhood was set up on Friday morning, more than 13,000 yuan has been
received. Many of the donors are retired people who happened to pass by the
center while shopping and exercising. An old lady in a gray overcoat with a
shopping basket in hand said, "Why don't you advise us about the donation drive
beforehand? If I didn't come by, I'd have missed the chance." Zhang, who's in
charge of the civil affairs of the Yuetan neighborhood, apologized to her,
saying this donation drive was indeed started in a rush. "We didn't knock
people's doors to mobilize them, or even print flyers or posters. We hope people
will come at their own will and it turns out to be pretty encouraging," she
said. So far, the All-China Youth Federation and the Chinese Juveniles
Development Foundation have donated 1 million yuan to young people in
disaster-hit areas, while the All-China Federation of Trade Unions have sent
over 3 million yuan to union organizations in tsunami-ravaged countries. Tcl
group, a domestic electronics manufacturer, donated 3 million yuan while the
Huawei Company gave Thailand, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Bangladesh communication
equipment worth US$500,000 each to support their post-disaster
construction. Wang xiaohua of the Red Cross Society of China said the Chinese
people are very active to join in this donation drive targeting foreign
needy.
Xinhua
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