Shanghai Daily news
Local and expatriate singers perform at a charity show
in Shanghai last night to raise funds for tsunami survivors in South and
Southeast Asia.
A Shanghai charity show was held last night to raise
donations for survivors of the Indian Ocean earthquake and subsequent tidal
waves. More than 600 performers participated in the show which lasted about 90
minutes.
Actors, television personalities, singers and dancers, as well as
athletes, friends from foreign communities and overseas artists from America,
Europe, India, Indonesia and the Philippines appeared.
They sang, danced and
recited poetry to express their care and the condolences of the city's residents
for those faraway tsunami victims.
During the show, four rounds of donations
were held. Fundraising through a hot line and a cell phone short message service
were also carried out at the same time around town.
Many local companies and
people from all walks of life, foreigners and locals alike, donated
funds.
Zhang Jun, a Shanghai Daily reporter who experienced the tsunami while
on his honeymoon in southern Thailand, said he was deeply touched by the efforts
of the survivors as soon as he and his wife were transferred to a safe place
last week.
"They set up a center asking for donations immediately," he
recalled. "We donated our T-shirts and coats."
Zhang also gave money in
donations initiated by the Shanghai Daily and the Wenxin United Press
Group.
Also last night, the parents of Liu Xiang, China's gold medal hurdler
at last year's Athens Olympics, and friends of Houston Rockets basketball star
Yao Ming, attended the show. They made donations in the names of the two famous
athletes.
Phil Neamen, an Australian teacher at the Yew Chung International
School (Shanghai), was among those confirmed dead in the tsunami that hit
Thailand where he was on vacation on December 26.
His wife, also a Yew Chung
teacher, was injured in the disaster. She has since returned to Australia for
treatment.
Several other YCIS staff and their families who were in the
tsunami-affected areas have returned home safely.
The Yew Chung Education
Foundation is providing the Neamens with assistance to cope with their tragedy.
The school will hold a memorial service for the family and other tsunami
victims, the school said.
Meanwhile, locals continued to dig deep into their
pockets to help survivors of the Southeast Asia earthquake and resulting
tsunamis that killed about 150,000 people in 12 countries ranging from Southeast
and South Asia to Africa.
Within a 30 minute period yesterday, a total of
226,600 yuan (US$27,300) had been collected at Shanghai Red Cross donation boxes
at the site of city's Public Security Bureau on Wuning Road S., Jing'an
District.
Police said more donation boxes would be set up at local police
departments at all levels in the coming days when the figure was expected to
rise.
Shanghai United Family Hospital announced it would provide free
sessions on "critical incident stress debriefing" today to interested
parties.
The sessions involve techniques intended to mitigate the impact of
trauma on individuals and communities.
It can be helpful in reducing the
impact of symptoms, assess the need for a more in-depth follow-up, and help to
provide a sense of closure following a crisis, hospital officials
said.
Charitable events will be held tomorrow morning at the Moon River Diner
on Hongmei Rd, Kabb in Xintiandi and the Blue Frog in Pudong's Jinqiao. Each of
the businesses are calling for people in the local foreign communities to donate
to the tsunami survivors.
The events are being co-organized by the three
venues and the Party People, a local association of caterers.
Hotel chain
Accor said a memorial will be held on Thursday in Shanghai to pay homage to the
life of Reggie Shiu.
The head of Accor SA's China unit is presumed to have
perished, along with his wife and two sons, in the tsunami that hit
Thailand.
The company said the event will raise money for Shiu's daughter,
Zoe, who survived and is currently in Singapore.
Shiu, a 49-year-old
Chinese-American, who was educated both in Hong Kong and New York City,
joined Accor in 1980 at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City.
He was put in
charge of Accor's Shanghai-based China operations in 2000.