Doctors Xia Jiyong (left) and Zhao Xinyan deliver
medical equipment to earthquake and tidal wave survivors in Sri Lanka yesterday.
Chinese medical teams are busy treating victims of the most devastating tsunami
in 40 years. ¡ª Xinhua
People from all walks of life across China have made an effort to donate
money to tsunami-ravaged countries.
The Liaoning Provincial Red Cross
Society collected 1.07 million yuan (US$128,915) during the three-day New Year
holiday.
The Red Cross Society of southwestern Yunnan Province has set up
donation centers at railway stations and in parks, urging people to offer a
helping hand to tidal wave victims. Yunnan residents have donated 263,500 yuan
thus far.
The Red Cross Society in eastern Jiangxi Province has opened a
special bank account to receive donations for relief work. The province has also
opened a hot line and set up donation centers at universities, government
institutions, neighborhood communities and public sites.
Carrefour
International Foundation has started an emergency aid program to donate 300,000
euros (US$397,980) to tsunami victims in Indonesia, Thailand and India.
The
fund will be used to supply water, food, as well as hygiene products such as
soap and detergents, Carrefour SA said yesterday. The foundation also promised
to rebuild schools and residential houses.
Some of Carrefour¡¯s outlets in
Indonesia are being used as food aid distribution centers,
local residents
said.
Meanwhile, the central government yesterday donated emergency aid of
US$200,000 to the Myanmar government for victims and relief work.
Chinese
Ambassador Li Jinjun handed US$200,000 in cash to Myanmar Minister of Social
Welfare, Relief and Resettlement Major-General Sein Htwa. Sein Htwa expressed
thanks to China.
At the donation ceremony, he confirmed that 64 people were
killed, 56 others injured and 29 villages destroyed. About 3,460 people were
left homeless after tidal waves crashed ashore on December 26.
Casualties
were lighter than some foreign media outlets estimated, he said, adding that
there were no casualties on Cocogyun Island, home to 976 people.
On December
31, 2004, the Red Cross Society of China also donated US$20,000 in cash to its
Myanmar counterpart.
The central government also provided a grant of
US$100,000 to the Somali transitional federal government as emergency
assistance for disaster relief to the African country hit hard by the tsunamis.
The donation was handed on Tuesday by Guo Chongli, China¡¯s ambassador to
Kenya, and to Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, president of the transitional federal
republic of Somalia, which is based in Kenya¡¯s capital Nairobi.
Yusuf said he
received the condolences of President Hu Jintao.
"We express our sincerest
thanks to the Chinese government and the president himself,¡± Yusuf said. ¡°China
is the first country to donate money to us. A friend in need is a friend indeed.
The Somali people will never forget that China always provides timely assistance
whenever Somalia faces difficulties,¡± Yusuf said.
Up to 200 Somalis were
killed and many more are missing. Efforts to assess the full extent of the
damage are being hampered by poor transport and communication networks, which
also affects the timely delivery of emergency relief.
The Red Cross Society
of China also donated US$100,000 yesterday to Sri Lanka, the second hardest hit
nation.
The tsunami killed at least 30,229 people and injured 15,683,
another 3,858 missing in Sri Lanka.
On behalf of the Chinese Red Cross
Association, Chinese Ambassador to Sri Lanka Sun Guoxiang handed the donation to
Tissa Abeywickrama, chairman of the Rehabilitation and Relief Operation Task
Force of the Sri Lanka Red Cross.
Sun said Sri Lanka and China have good
relations and they always help each other in difficult situations. He said he
hoped Sri Lanka¡¯s recovery period would be short.
China previously offered
relief materials worth about US$3 million as well as US$200,000 in cash to Sri
Lanka. China will provide meteorological aid to tsunami-hit countries, said a
senior official with the China Meteorological Administration (CMA) yesterday.
The CMA has sent telegrams to 10 countries hit by the earthquake-triggered
tsunamis, and would like to provide meteorological information to reduce damage
caused by future tidal waves, said Yu Jixin, director of the Department of
International Cooperation of the CMA.
¡°We have also expressed our wishes in
the telegram to provide meteorological equipment, including satellite
information receiving devices,¡± Yu said.
He said they are still waiting for
a reply.
¡°If those countries do have the need for our meteorological aid, we
will provide it as soon as possible,¡± Yu said.
The Chinese Central
Meteorological Station (CCMS) has opened a new service that covers the
tsunami-hit countries. It will provide weather and climate forecasts, as well as
an analysis of atmospheric conditions in the Indian Ocean.
Two large scale
charity performances will be held in Beijing tonight and on Sunday to raise more
money.
All revenue from the performances will be sent to tsunami victims by
the Chinese Red Cross Society, according to volunteer committee sources.