A 14-member Chinese medical team Tuesday started the aid work here, a small
town some 90 km off Colombo, the capital of tsunami-stricken Sri Lanka.
The five surgeons and two nurses in the team have treated around 100 local
patients Tuesday morning, while the seven experts in the field of
infectious-disease have examined the water sources in the town with a population
of 15,000.
Most patients were seen being suffered from foot or leg injures due to their
rushing fleeing of the tsunami disaster on Dec. 26, which claimed for nearly
30,000 lives across the island nation.
The epidemic specialists said so far no indication clinched that the water
had been contaminated.
The team set up its camp at a local Buddhism temple and the monks there
offered them two rooms to store their gears being brought here from Beijing.
The group had to accommodate in five make-shift tents on the temple's
backyard and the workshop was also cemented there.
Two officers with the Hikkaduwa public health authority are assisting the
Chinese team to do the coordinating job. The power at the temple was on and the
water supply was restored, which made the medical aid work possible.
One local volunteer has been doing the interpretation job for the team and
people in the neighborhood who speak English also came to help.
Hundreds in town are feared dead during the tidal wave hit and thousands
might be injured. Loud speakers at the temple has been announcing the
notification to urge locals to approach for medical aid and more patients were
expected to flock here soon.
Wang Bingqiang, the squad leader, told Xinhua the medicine they have brought
here is not sufficient and the local health authority pledged to lend a helping
hand.
Meanwhile, another Chinese medical squad will come soon and hopefully will
bring more medicine here.
Wang's team arrived in Colombo late on Sunday and entered the
tsunami-affected area on early Monday.
Questioned on how long the team is to stay here, Wang said, "it could be 10
days, could be three or four weeks."