NZ announces new relief package for tsunami-stricken countries
18/1/2005 17:33
New Zealand will provide 68 million NZ dollars (about US$47.6 million)
disaster relief package for tsunami-stricken south Asian countries, Prime
Minister Helen Clark announced Tuesday. She made the announcement at a press
conference following the first cabinet meeting in the new year. The package
includes 20 million NZ dollars (about US$14 million) for the United Nations
tsunami relief effort and 20 million NZ dollars for the New Zealand Aid
bilateral program in Indonesia, one of the worst hit areas. Another 19
million NZ dollars (about US$13.3 million) will go toward the dollar-for-dollar
matching of public donations in the country. Specific requests will get 4
million NZ dollars (about US$2.8 million) and 5 million NZ dollars (about US$3.5
million) will cover the costs of departments working over there. Clark said
the package reflects both the magnitude of the disaster and its impact on a
number of nations in the region with which New Zealand has important bilateral
relationships. Clark said it has been a huge "whole-of-government" operation,
involving many departments, which have been going since the tsunami struck on
Boxing Day killing more than 160,000 people. She said the 68 million NZ
dollars package includes the 10 million NZ dollars already allocated and 52
million NZ dollars ( about US$36.4 million) that would be spent this financial
year. The United Nations would immediately receive 20 million NZ dollars (about
US$14 million). "Our judgment is that as a good neighbor, New Zealand should
step forward in times of crisis, as it has from the outset of the relief
effort," the prime minister said. According to Clark, The 68 million NZ
dollars represents about 17 NZ dollars per person in New Zealand. "In terms
of contributions announced by other governments so far, I think per capita New
Zealand is probably coming in about ninth, which is a very big thing for us,"
she said. Clark also said about 113 defense force personnel are now deployed
in the region. They are operating three air force aircraft. A medical team is
working in Banda Aceh, communications specialists are in three cities, and staff
officers are attached to emergency headquarters in Medan. "The New Zealand
police have also made a huge contribution, with 25 police and civilian staff
deployed in the international disaster victim identification operation in
Phuket, Thailand," she said. Clark also announced that the cabinet has agreed
the Ministry of Civil Defense and Emergency Management would contract
specialists to review existing information about the risk of tsunamis to New
Zealand.
Xinhua
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