International aid continues to pour into tsunami-hit Asia
7/1/2005 15:09
International aid continued to pour into tsunami-hit Asia Thursday with more
countries sending relief goods or making donation calls. Chinese Premier Wen
Jiabao said Thursday at the Special ASEAN Leaders' Meeting on the Aftermath of
Earthquake and Tsunami that China is willing to make contributions to relief
efforts and reconstruction in the tsunami-ravaged area. China has actively
participated in disaster relief efforts, sending humanitarian aid and rescue
staff to disaster-hit regions. Wen's special plane carried China's third batch
of humanitarian aid to Indonesia. United States Secretary of State Colin
Powell also pledged at the special ASEAN leaders' meeting in Jakarta that the US
will continue to stand with the tsunami-hit countries in relief and
reconstruction efforts. Powell said "a core group" of nations consisting of
several US allies will from now "fold itself into the broader coordination
efforts of the United Nations." French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie
announced Thursday that five Puma helicopters and another navy frigate would be
sent early next week to reinforce French military means to help the relief
effort in south Asia. The Jeanne d'Arc will carry four light helicopters and
two Puma transport helicopters and some 60 engineers, as well as 6,000 food
rations, 800 tons of water and water treatment equipment, five tons of medicine
and field medical posts, according to colonel Gerard Dubois of French
staff. Members of the Canadian military's Disaster Assistance Response Team
are on their way to tsunami-striken Sri Lanka, official sources said. The
first plane, loaded with equipment, has left Toronto for Sri Lanka Thursday
morning. A second flight carrying personnel is scheduled for takeoff at 3:30
p.m. Thursday. The team will be bringing four planeloads of materials,
including 40 vehicles, equipment for water purification, and a 43- member
medical team. Saudi Arabia's nationwide fund-raising campaign for victims of
the Asian tsunami collected more than 117 million riyals (about 31. US$27
million) on its first day. The first donation of US$266,600 was announced 45
minutes after the launch of the campaign on Thursday. King Fahd pledged 5. US$3
million, while Crown Prince Abdullah gave US$2.7 million. Defense Minister
Prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz offered US$1.3 million. A team of 10 Spanish
doctors and volunteers arrived Thursday in Sri Lanka with medicines to help the
victims of tsunamis. Following the doctors and volunteers, 70 containers of
humanitarian aid goods will be delivered to Sri Lanka by sea. The Dutch
public have so far donated around 63 million euros ( about US$83 million) to the
relief effort following the tsunami in the Indian Ocean, Dutch media reported on
Thursday. The figure is still on the rise especially after special appeals
were broadcast on Dutch radios and televisions and in newspapers on
Thursday. Mexican President Vicente Fox ordered the government on Thursday to
make its first contribution in support of tsunami-hit Asian countries, according
to a press statement released by the presidency. While relief operations are
making "phenomenal progress" in areas that can be reached, the United Nations
humanitarian chief warned Thursday "enormous problems" still persist. "We are
doing an enormous job already, we already have hundreds of people working,"
Under-Secretary-General Jan Egeland told a news briefing in New York of the
overall UN role as coordinator of the massive international relief effort. He
said: "But we need to build up more, and we can and we will build up more, and
dramatically so in the next few days." Turning to the Indonesian provinces of
Aceh and Sumatra, the regions most ravaged by the tsunami, he said though "big
progress is being made," there are still enormous problems such as the
remoteness and lack of infrastructure. Estimates of the tsunami's overall
toll put the casualties at 150,000, with nearly 100,000 of them so far in
Indonesia. More than half a million people are believed to have been injured and
up to 5 millions are classified as lacking basic services.
Xinhua
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