Archive for the ‘Official news source’ Category

Xinhua: Death toll over 2000, 195 missing. Day of mourning on Wednesday.

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Report from Xinhua on the latest death toll, and a national day of mourning for the Yushu earthquake victims.

BEIJING, April 20 (Xinhua) — To mourn the victims of a strong earthquake in northwest China’s Qinghai Province, national flags will fly at half-mast in the country and its embassies and consulates overseas on Wednesday, according to the State Council Tuesday.

To express the deep condolences for the quake victims, public entertainment will also be suspended on Wednesday, the State Council, China’s cabinet, said in an announcement.

As of 8 p.m. Monday, the 7.1-magnitude quake, which struck the Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Yushu last Wednesday, had killed more than 2,000 while 195 people were still missing, the rescue headquarters said.

Baoxing

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Baoxing, according to government reports, was one of the worst affected areas in the 12 May 2008 earthquake; 3 died, 338 were injured and altogether more than 41,000 people were affected in Baoxing, which is 80% of the total population in the county.

More than 800 houses collapsed, and up till May 11th 2009, 652 of them had commenced reconstruction and 435 had completed reconstruction. 2 middle schools are being rebuilt with the help of Hainan province and 1 Hope Elementary school has been donated by a central government research office in the most affected town called Raozi, which is of Tibetan ethnicity.

Online sources.

Training courses for emergency situations

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Training courses in Chengdu for emergency situations

本报讯(记者石小宏 实习生 陈黎)面对突发的地震、火灾、水灾等灾害,如何在黄金自救时间里运用救生包?20日,在华西医院与香港理工大学护理学院联合举办的华夏高等护理教育联盟暑期灾害护理培训班上,教师给来自内地和香港41所高校护理专业近200名学生出的第一道题。

为期两周的培训,主要是普及灾害理论以及灾害自救护理。举办这样的培训班,目的是让学员们学会灾害中的自救护理,并把这些知识传给更多的人群。

Chengdu-based ‘nursing in emergency situations’ course for mainland Chinese and Hong Kong trainees.

A summer vacation course in ‘nursing in emergency situations’ has been held by Chengdu’s Hua Xi Hospital and Hong Kong Polytechnic University (香港理工大学).

During the course, the first question asked of the 200 students from the mainland and 41 Hong Kong students the first question is, “how can you use a survival kit effectively in case of an earthquake, fire, flood or other major disaster?”

The main aim of the two-week course is how individuals can deal with disasters and protect themselves in emergency situations.  The idea is that the course trainees learn survival and first aid techniques, knowledge which they can then pass on to other people.

Dedicated agency to co-ordinate protection of old county town

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

Mianyang, Sichuan Province dedicated agency to protect the old county town of Beichuan

China news agency, Mian Yang, June 11 (Reporter Xiao Qing)

Reporters from Mian Yang CPC Municipal Committee were informed that in order to speed up the treatment of the barrier lake in the Tangjiahe Mountain and the protection of the old county, Mian Yang City will set up an agency to co-ordinate the work of specialized agencies. At present, these two tasks are beginning.

The protection of Beichuan Qiang Autonomous County of the Old County and Barrier Lake in the Tangjiahe Mountain have aroused widespread concern and development.  The post-disaster reconstruction plan is about the protection of barrier lake in the Tangjiahe Mountain in Beichuan county includes the construction of the museum, heritage and rescue, protection, water conservancy facilities reconstruction (focused on barrier lake management), there are two investment plans totalling nearly 1.2 billion Yuan.

According to a report, because management of the barrier lake in the Tangjiahe mountain and Beichuan old county’s protection regionally focus and covers a wide range, Mian Yang City plans that CHEN YUAN CHUN, who is the Municipal Standing Committee and the CPC secretary of Beichuan county, should be responsible for a specialized agency which will integrate land, water supply, environmental protection, traffic and other departments.

Hanmei grants

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

The first “Hanmei grants” in Sichuan released by Taiwan Red Cross organizations

2009-06-10 source: www.chinanews.com.cn

According to Chengdu Xinhua (Lin Feng Yang) on the 10th June 2009, the Taiwan Red Cross organization established an organization named “Han-mei grants” in the earthquake area.  The first batch of grants were issued to the ‘Liberation of North Road’ Primary School in Chengdu in Jinniu District.

Li Lidong, from the Red Cross Society of China’s Sichuan reconstruction Office, and Chen Dachen and Su Qionghua, from the Taiwan Red Cross Society, as well as important leaders from Si Chuan Red Cross Society, were invited to the issuing ceremony, also attended by more than 1,000 primary school teachers and students.

Weizhou housing project

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

The largest housing project

2009-06-04 10:17     Journalist: Yang Jin

The largest housing project for low-income urban residents has started in Guozhu, Weizhou, in Wenchuan. Guangzhou project is helping to build the project. This is the largest scale reconstruction and most significant investment of its type in the area.

The purpose of the project is recovering and improving living standards.  A total investment of about 300 million yuan is planned, and the total area is about 850 square km, with 6 kinds of house types. The project is expected to finish in November 2009, when the houses could be used.

Australian group re-building three business schools in the Sichuan earthquake damage

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Australian group re-building of the three business schools in the Sichuan earthquake damage

A school that was badly damaged in the 2008 WenChuan earthquake re-opened today (4th June 2009) in MianYang in SiChuan Province.  The reconstruction project is supported by Australia and New Zealand Banking Group, the Blue Scope Steel Group and the Australian Allens Arthur Robinson attorney affairs office.

ANZ Bank said that the three Australian companies are cooperating with the government of Mianyang city Sichuan Province, to reconstruct the teaching building of the YangJia school in the city which contains six new classrooms for 300 students.

The new teaching building was named an “ANZ Bank Building”.  Designed for resisting earthquakes of up to 8 on the Richter scale, the building ulilizes high-quality, recyclable building materials, including steel made in Australia.

The school buildings are financed by the Australia-New Zealand Bank Group.  BlueScope Steel Group is responsible for the provision of building materials and construction supervision while Allens Arthur Robinson attorney affairs office provides free legal services.  The Australia and New Zealand Banking Group will also fund the school’s desks and chairs, and donate stationery to students.

The Chief Executive Officer of Australia and New Zealand Banking Group, ZhaoMing Gao, said that ANZ Bank and China are involved in a long-term cooperative relationship.  The Yang Middle School reconstruction project provides the opportunity to ANZ Bank “to make some permanent changes in” severely dameaged region in the earthquake.

Report reveals reasons behind school buildings collapse in Sichuan

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

China.org.cn by Ma Yujia, May 26, 2009

A report from a joint investigation team – Analysis of building damage in 5.12 quake – suggests that the proportion of school buildings damaged beyond repair in the Sichuan earthquake was four times higher than government buildings, and goes on to examine some of the reasons for the collapse of these buildings.

According to China Economic Weekly, the report was written by a joint investigation team from Tsinghua University, Southwest Jiaotong University and Beijing Jiaotong University. It reveals that 13 percent of 54 government buildings investigated were considered damaged “beyond repair”; while the proportion among 44 investigated school buildings was 57 percent, 4 times higher than government buildings.

School buildings suffered the most serious damage

After the 5.12 devastating earthquake, experts from Tsinghua University were sent to Sichuan to commence an investigation into building damage, coordinating with other qualified academics from Southwest Jiaotong University and Beijing Jiaotong University.

The experts divided buildings under investigation into 7 different categories: school buildings, government buildings, industrial buildings, residential buildings, hospital buildings, and others. According to the statistics from the report, among 384 checked buildings, school buildings and industrial buildings suffered the most damage in the earthquake.

The report says many school buildings in the quake zone were designed with a masonry structure and contained large rooms, big windows and external corridors, which rendered these buildings susceptible to earthquake damage. Similarly, industrial buildings in some villages were also based on a masonry structure, with poor earthquake-resistance. However, most government buildings were framed structures, capable of resisting an earthquake.

Following the quake, concerns were voiced both at home and abroad over construction quality in the quake zone. Responding to these suspicions, Vice Governor of Sichuan Province Wei Hong said that in such a devastating earthquake the collapse of school buildings was inevitable.

Professor Lu Xinzheng from Tsinghua University thinks that China’s weak social and economic conditions have resulted in the low earthquake-resistance level on the intensity scale in some areas. He feels it should be raised by 1 to 2 grades.

Various factors combined to damage school buildings

“For many years, schools in China were designed with the same resistance level as standard residential buildings, while in Japan, the level for schools was 1 grade higher on the quake-intensity scale,” said Feng Peng, a member of the investigation team, in an interview with China economic weekly. “We should increase this level and make school buildings the safest places, capable of serving as safe havens during critical events.”

In July 2008, the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Construction and the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine released a revised Code for Seismic Design of Buildings and Standard for Classification of Seismic Protection of Building Constructions, which require that new schools must be designed with a higher resistance-level than standard residential buildings, one grade higher on the quake intensity scale.

According to Feng, there were “quality problems” with some school buildings; however, other factors too, such as poor design, might have combined to result in damage to thousands of school buildings during the catastrophic earthquake. For example, the roof-span of a classroom is usually wide, it is therefore more vulnerable to strong quakes. It was also the case that older schools, and those not built in conformity with construction norms, generally suffered greater damage.

An expert from a domestic building research institute, who was sent to quake-stricken areas to conduct research, said: “Most buildings designed in line with seismic code and according to higher construction standards did not collapse, even in high-level intensity areas. During his investigation, “quality issues” were indeed identified, such as poor design and use of substandard building materials.

Local economic factors restrict ability to increase resistance level

According to Feng Peng, there are only a few cities in China where residential buildings have been designed with a resistance specification of grade 8 on the intensity scale. The higher the level of resistance, the better a building is capable of resisting an earthquake.

However, local economic development is a major barrier to increasing the resistance level. Analysis indicates that an increase of one grade in resistance level can raise a building’s construction costs by 5 to 10 percent.

“For example, many regions in Shanxi Province lie in areas subject to a threat level of grade 9, but nobody is willing to invest in building to this standard due to the enormous cost,” said Feng. “At present, buildings in China are generally completed to the national minimum standard. Our government should encourage people to build themselves safer houses with a higher-resistance level.”

Nanfeng Chuang:Earthquake Zone NGOs: Wavering Between Leaving and Entering

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Interesting article on NGOs in the quake zone.

Earthquake Zone NGOs: Wavering Between Leaving and Entering

Nanfengchuang (南风窗), May 6, 2009. 震区 NGO, 摇摆在进退之间
By Zhang Jianfeng

Officials have been gradually increasing their checks and screening of NGO volunteers. “We cannot exclude the possibility that some people with their own agenda will pretend to be volunteers while doing things that affect social stability.” For some NGOs, limits to their own capacity make it impossible to sustain work in the disaster zone over the long term.

When the Wenchuan earthquake occurred, Zheng Keke and several colleagues, filled with emotion, rushed to the disaster zone to help. They decided to stay and help. Over the past year people like them have been encountering continual frustration.

They wanted to provide some material support to schools in the disaster area to help in the reconstruction of education. There has to be a special procedure for doing anything – if they wanted to provide educational equipment and professionally trained volunteers to a school, they needed to get permission from the agency in charge and the school itself. Most of the time, getting permission has been difficult, a few times volunteers were actually kicked out.

Zheng Keke, vice director of the Hongde Cultural Development Center of Beijing says that “Over the past year, whatever the government can allow us to do, we do. If not, we leave. That is the situation.”

During the first days after the earthquake, the government allowed over 200 civil organizations, including some international organizations, to go to the disaster area to help in the relief work. In addition, a great number of individual volunteers came as well. This outpouring was a
consolation for the people in the earthquake zone.

The earthquake brought some difficult to perceive social problems to the earthquake zone. If people were not careful, things could erupt into an incident. Preserving social stability became job one for the local government and the difficult-to-control people and organizations who came from the outside came to be seen as a potential cause of instability. The government gradually increased its management of volunteer groups and of individual volunteers.

“The disaster area needs to be stable.” said Gao Guizi coordinator of the Sichuan 512 Relief Service Center told me. “After the earthquake, society in the disaster area is weaker, and so officials need to give more attention to this issue. “

For the many organizations and volunteers who flocked to the disaster area, the time of troubles is far from being over. At any moment they may be faced with the choice: Leave or Stay.

We Don’t Need Them

“Before we would think to getting in touch with provincial officials, to do something, to put pressure on local officials.” Zheng Keke says. “Now we just do what we can, and if we can’t we just withdraw.”

Whether an NGO comes in or withdraws depends upon the attitude of local officials. Zheng Keke understands this very well. When they were doing relief work in Guangyuan, he ran into a township director who was concerned about problems in Chinese education. The two met by accident,
and the township head quickly invited them to come help rebuild education in that locality.

After a few discussions, he met the vice township director in charge of education and the principal of the local school and came to a clear agreement with them on volunteers to be sent to the school to help.
However, the day after leadership of the township changed and the first township director was transferred, the vice director in charge of education called Zheng Keke and told him that cooperation would be suspended because “the new township head has different views on education.”

The same disappointment was repeated in Dujiangyan. Zheng Keke planned to offer assistance to an elementary school that had been completely destroyed in the earthquake and to send in some volunteers. The school welcomed the volunteers. Before the school had reported to the local
authorities, two volunteers went to the school in early June. “The principal was very supportive. He told us not to say that we are volunteers, just say that were teacher’s aides. Stay in the tent when
you don’t have anything to do and don’t circulate do that people won’t notice fresh faces.”

But it didn’t work out. One of the teachers reported them to the township government and the principal had to call Zheng Keke to tell him that the volunteers had to be withdrawn.

Getting things done through official channels is difficult. In order to get started working in the disaster area, they made contact with a principal leader on the Sichuan Communist Party Committee. That leader made a telephone call to the secretary of the city party committee. The secretary of the city party committee then made a phone call to the local education committee to make an appointment. Zheng Keke and two colleagues took a train from Chengdu to see them. Not only would the education committee members not shake hands, they wouldn’t stand up to greet them either. This time, though they had the support of the secretary, they still couldn’t come to an agreement.

“They just come up with one pretext or another to get rid of you. If they want to change, they will think hard to come up with a way. If they don’t want to change, and I give them an overhead projector for a classroom, but they don’t use it.”

Zheng Keke decided to rely on luck. The disaster area is so large, if he runs into a wall in one district he can just switch to working in another. There is always somewhere to go. He has been doing that for nearly a year.

However, because of increasing controls on NGOs, the future remains uncertain. Luo Shihong, who has been doing social assistance work in Zundao Township (遵道镇), Mianzhu City, says that as social problems may continue to grow in the disaster area, officials may well decide that they should let more social organizations come to help.

The Mianzhu City Communist Youth League Committee and Young Volunteers Association in April 2009 issued a notice calling for strengthening management of volunteer groups and individual volunteers. The notice stated that with the one year anniversary of the earthquake approaching, very many volunteers would be flooding into the area. “We cannot exclude the possibility that some people with their own agenda will pretend to be volunteers while doing things that affect social stability.”

The notice stated that they had done some checking and screening and this would continue. They asked that all individual volunteers service organizations register again, providing information on the times that service is provided, service recipients, and how service is provided. Moreover, all local official departments are required to maintain a detail list of all the names of the volunteers of the various voluntary organizations.

Confronted with this situation, many voluntary organizations felt they had to leave. The number of NGOs working in the disaster area has been declining. Taking Zundao Township as an example, Luo Shihong explained, that the number of NGOs working there peaked between one and two hundred. That period lasted for two to three months. Now there are about a dozen.

Luo Shihong’s organization has not registered. When they started to work in Zundao Township, they had a close and happy relationship with the local government. They worked out of the same offices. In order to make best use of these resources in post-quake reconstruction, the Zundao Township government set up the “Zundao Township Social Resources Coordination Committee” led by the Zundao Township Communist Party Secretary. Lou Shihong took part in the office work supporting the committee. The township gave them a office designation and an official stamp.

Change came too quickly. The had originally planned to register with the Mianzhu City Communist Youth League Committee. It had been agreed to beforehand. But when that notice from the Mianzhu City Youth League came out, those expectations burst like a bubble. The city committee no longer allowed them to work in their own office and pushed them out to the quake shelter area. They were also to be taken out of that semi-governmental coordinating group.

“We prepared to withdraw,” said Wang Yueyun, one of the early coordination office director and a member of Luo Shihong’s group. “Unlike the early days, the disaster area no long welcomes volunteers. We have come to understood this since last August, and it is in the logic of things.”

In a report on their withdrawal from the coordinating group, he wrote, “Under the leadership of the Party Committee and government, Zundao Township gradually came back to life, going back to the earlier life it had during the previous period of harmonious development. As volunteers, what we are able to do will become less and less. Under these circumstances, we are bringing to an end nearly a year of volunteer work in Zundao Township.”

This is becoming a commonplace. In a large quake refugee settlement area in Luoshui Township in Shifang City, the management committee has already received an official directive that they are to ask personnel of Save the Children (UK) (英国儿童救助会) which had been providing help with washing infants aged three and under in the small community, to leave.

The management committee said that their standard is whether an organization is helping the public. They believe that Save the Children does not meet that standard. They present themselves as volunteers but don’t do anything and they are taking up a refugee shelter space that is very badly needed.

Now management committees have been set up in nearly all the small settlement communities. Some earthquake relief “advanced elements” from within the system have been appointed members of these committees. Their job is to manage everything that goes on in these communities. One of these matters is to ask about the comings and goings of organizations from outside China mainland and their members.

The director of the Luoshui Township management committee keeps a close watch on those people.

“We are afraid that some accident or problem will arise. You can see for yourself, we are doing fine. People from the outside coming in to ask about this and that is not necessary.” She added, “Who knows that their real intention is.”

Reassure People

At the same settlement point, there are other organizations much appreciated by officials. One is the NGO Disaster Preparedness Center (NGO备灾中心). The director of the management committee said that “They are still doing some work, the people see it and appreciate it.”

The organization said that official introduced the organization to local officials. They also got his help when they started their work in the resettlement area. She told them in order to work there, they had to
establish good relations with the government.

The NGO Disaster Preparedness Center director Zhang Guoyuan said their work has been going smoothly. They don’t have nearly no problems with funding or policies.

The two NGOs Give2Asia (赠予亚洲) and Trafigura (托克国际) allocated funding for the disaster area and the NGO Disaster Preparedness Center became the implementer of their programs. Of the RMB 3 million in funding, 2 million were devoted to Luoshui. The local government gave the free use of land for their office. Another 1 million was allocated to support grassroots NGOs work. Nine NGOs won their support during the bidding process and have already started working out of the offices of the NGO Disaster Preparation Center.

Zhang Guoyuan and some other members are Sichuan local officials who understand the workings of government very well and so were able to set up communication and negotiations with local officials. They believe this is the most important reason they are able to maintain good relations with
the local government. “You understand that exchanges and communication with government
officials have to be carried out in a certain environment. We have had a lot of contact with officials before and worked closely with them. Some of the things they actually say and what the real meaning of what they say are sometimes different.” He said, “Sometimes there are implicit rules.
If you understand then very good, if you don’t you will have a lot of problems. You need to penetrate their special language.”

Zhang Guoyuan set up two offices, one in Hanwang and the other in Luoshui. To prepare to set up work there, he sent two people to live in each place to live, eat and play with the local people. This helped build understanding and trust, knowledge of the needs of the local community. Once this was done, establishing an office was easy.

Now they are as close to local officials and other residents as neighbours. The management committee gave their office an official plaque. They said that two things were particularly important:

  • All their workers are Sichuanese. This helps makes it easier to communicate and building friendly cooperation.
  • They do what the local people, especially officials, want to be done.

For example, they set up an employment creation fund dedicated to training people for jobs. As everyone knows, employment is a big problem for local government. If through training the employment relevant skills of local people are improved, pressure on the local government will be much reduced. This also becomes their own political achievement.

Nonetheless, despite that, officials aren’t entirely satisfied with them. A management committee director told me, the township leadership sometimes will ask “what is that organization doing?” in a mysterious sort of way.

“We must make sure that they know we exist and what we are doing,” Zhang Huikan, a manager for the NGO Disaster Center office in Hanwang said looking at the bulletin board filled with contact information for many officials. “We regularly send a progress report on our work to officials.”

Most of the time when officials reject an NGO it is because they don’t know what they are doing. Some researchers believed that officials gave permission for many organizations to go to the disaster area immediately after the earthquake was because they were overwhelmed by the disaster and didn’t have time to pay attention to the question. They looked at it positively and needed the extra help these organizations were bringing. This went on until the officials had time to pay attention to this extra help.

“In many places, people who come from the outside are not managed by local officials. They don’t know what you will do so if they can get you to leave they feel relieved,” says Gao Guizi. “In the disaster area, this happened all over.”

The Sichuan 512 NGO Services Center to which Gao Guizi belong was founded after the earthquake to provide information and resources to the many NGO requesting to work in the earthquake disaster area. It is said that the 512 Center has assisted over 100 NGOs.

Some of official attitude against NGO as to do with the unethical behaviour of some NGOs or volunteers. In Dujiangyan, officials caught five “volunteers”. They had collected a lot of relief materials in their tent. They were doing nothing in the disaster zone, just sleeping in their tents by day and going out at night. This incident made the authorities suspicious, so they checked on these people and found that they had lock picking tools.

“Those five really messed things up…” Zheng Keke said. “Now we avoid the word volunteer. We only say we are teacher assistants.”

The Mianzhu City Communist Youth League notice also mentioned this problem, saying that there are a small number of people who pretend to be volunteers but do things completely against the spirit of volunteerism. Volunteers and organizations that violate the law or regulations will have their service credentials cancelled by the Youth League, asked to leave or be handed over to police.

This is only a fuse that could lead to trouble. What officials really worry about is that volunteers from the outside will stir up the emotions of local people and influence them. If there are no outsiders around, they only need to control the site of the problem, cut off all means of communication, and they can control any problem, and it will not be made bigger. The presence of outside organizations is a challenge to this method of control.

In a place where there have been a particularly large number of deaths, especially if a school collapsed, the parents look to the volunteers as the only people upon whom they can rely. In these situations, some young volunteers may become one of those making accusations. They might encourage parents to stand up for their rights. In Dujiangyan, 200 parents who had lost children made an emotional plan to present a petition. They were all stopped by armed force. It isn’t clear whether volunteers were with them. Zhang Keke said that the skills of volunteers working in the disaster area need to be improved.

“You need to know what the real situation is and what needs to be done and what shouldn’t be done,” he said. “You don’t represent yourself, you are a group. You need to put emotion aside, and handle things in a skilful way.”

Sustainable Difficulties

NGO capacity determines who long they can serve in the earthquake disaster zone. In the early days after the disaster, before there was official intervention, weak capacity prevented grassroots NGOs within China mainland from being equal to the task.

Luo Shihong has experience with this. He said, “We always thought that if we had money, we could handle anything, if we had supplies we could help people. But we gradually realized that kind of thinking is wrong.”

During the crisis relief period, supplies from within China and abroad poured into the earthquake disaster area. Sometimes tens of thousands of hundreds of thousands of tons of supplies reached a single township. Distributing those supplies became a big test of the NGOs. This involves supply chain management, warehouse management, and community surveys. Only people who possess these special skills can ensure that assistance is fairly and effectively distributed. In Zundao Township, Luo Shihong and others needed to serve 20,000 people. They were 100 volunteer organizations. It was poorly coordinated.

The specialized knowledge and efficiency of some organizations from outside China mainland awed them. One example were the NGOs from Spain and the United Kingdom. The Spanish group, in charge of supplying water, only sent three people. After doing some technical calculations on how much water each person would need to drink each day and how much water would be needed for washing, they determined how many liters of water would be needed. They set up their equipment and within two days were supplying clean water to 15,000 people. The British were equally efficient. They were in charge of toilets. After they knew the number of people in the resettlement area, they calculated how many toilets they would need to install and how large an area each toilet could serve, then installed the necessary hardware.

The period of urgent relief passed quickly and the earthquake disaster area entered the rebuilding phase. For many NGOs, this was a period of transition when they needed to go into the community to work. This required them to possess skills needed to keep working over the long term. Wanting to help wasn’t enough.

In October 2008, Luo Shihong group began giving training on how to do daily work effectively to the members of the group. They believed this training could no longer be put off. Many organizations like them are still feeling their way forward.

If they cannot in a short time quickly increase their overall capacity, they will have to leave. This overall capacity includes sustaining funds for operations, finding workers with special skills, and orderly management of the internal workings of the organization.

Taking funding as an example, many organizations are able to raise money and nobody is giving them money. One common way of saving money is for each volunteer to be responsible for their own expenses rather than the organization. In Shifang, Zhang Pei, the Party Secretary of the Chongqing Volunteers to Help the Elderly and Handicapped, told me this is a common method of NGOs working in the disaster area, so the organization does not have this burden.

The early volunteers, were passionate about helping, so they could tighten their belts and guive of themselves for a few weeks. But they couldn’t last for long. Cui Fan, director of the Sichuan office of Oxfam says, “Surviving is always a consideration. Just like a family in its daily life, when its finances run low, everything becomes difficult.”

Oxfam is the only international organization that received written official permission to operate in the earthquake disaster area. It set up an office in Chengdu after the earthquake. They expect over the next three to five years to spend HK$ 130 million on earthquake reconstruction, repairing small local infrastructure and living conditions. Funding is not a problem. Even so, they do face limits on who they can deliver services to and capacity limitations. There are many places with unmet needs. No organization can do it all. They and other NGOs can only succeed by working together with government, with its large capacity and its coverage of all of this vast area.

“We also are not certain,” said Cui Fan, “just how long we will be able to continue.”

Currently, there are still some NGOs and individual volunteers who seek to work in the earthquake disaster area. The Sichuan 512 NGO Services Center cautions them that they need to think carefully and prepare well and not act rashly. Tian Jun, one of the center’s coordinators, these people want to help others but they must be prepared to sustain their assistance over the long term. “When doing good puts you under a lot of pressure, you can suffer a lot and so will the people you are helping.”

Wang Yueyun, who is about to leave, feels there is nothing that can be done about it. For a year they have “worked hard, done all they could and grown.” Many of their efforts didn’t get started or have come to an end. He said that they will gradually be forgotten by the local people because they were not able to make as a big a difference to the local community as they had hoped and they were not able to build trust between themselves and the community.

However, they are convinced that the services provided by the government (especially services, the software aspect of things) cannot cover the needs of all the people and the entire area, there will be, as the NGOs that filled in these gaps depart one after another, there will be unmet needs that will have consequences in the disaster area for some time to come.

Recently, the suicide of a deputy director of the Beichuan County Communist Party Committee Propaganda Department attracted much attention. The local government has already issued a document calling for an enquiry into the psychological state of local officials and to take better care of government and party cadres.

In the Shifang City settlement camp, a refugee said, we need these people (NGOs).

It was an evening, the music was relatively fast, and many refugees were happily dancing under some red lights. They were using a big tent set up by an NGO to provide them with an entertainment center.

The refugee said, “The NGOs are more efficient than the government.”

Thus far, nobody has done an overall, objective assessment of NGO work in the disaster area. But the need, the trust in NGOs and the reliance upon them does certainly exist.

“Some country people were at the door of their home, they say in the field opposite someone passing by. They saw it was someone from outside, they can guess that it is a volunteer. They know that someone cares about them and that they haven’t left.” Gao Guizi continued, “The volunteer doesn’t have to do anything, they don’t even have to wave, they just need to pass by, and by doing so they might even save a life.”

Chinese text from http://www.ngocn.org/?action-viewnews-itemid-45084

震区NGO,摇摆在进退之间

发布: 2009-5-12 12:18 | 作者: 章剑锋 南风窗 | 来源: 南风窗网站 | 查看: 128次

汶川地震那会儿,郑珂珂和几个同仁满腔热情奔赴灾区,从北京驾车输送物资过去。之后,他们决定呆在那里,继续帮忙。而这种想法在过去一年间,却不断遇挫。

他们拟向灾区学校提供一些资源援助,以支持当地的教育重建。凡事总需程序,他们若想让自己提供的教学设备和专业志愿者顺利进入学校,需要得到主管部门和具体学校的许可。多数时候,获得理解并不容易;少数几次,他们的志愿者遭到驱逐。
身为北京泓德中育文化发展中心副主任的郑珂珂说:“一年下来,政府能接受,我们就做;不能,我们就走。情况就是这样。”
地震发生之初,据估计,官方放行了约200余家民间组织进入灾区参与协同救援工作,包括一些国际组织在内,志愿者个体更是不计其数。这些自发力量的涌现让灾民感到温暖。
地震也给灾区带来一些不易察觉的社会问题,稍有不慎将演变成各类事端。维护稳定于是被地方提到核心工作序列,难以控制的外来机构和人员成为潜在的不安定诱因之一。政府逐步加强了对志愿者服务团队和个人的管理。
“灾区要稳定,”四川512民间救助服务中心协调人高圭滋对本刊记者说,“地震之后,灾区社会更加脆弱,官方将很多精力放在了对付这件事情上。”
对于许多奔赴四川灾区的民间组织或志愿者个体来说,困难时期远未结束。他们随时需要面临选择——离开,或者留下?

我们不需要他们
“以前我们想再找省政府做做工作,压压他们(地方官员),”郑珂珂说,“现在我们是能做的做,做不了的就退。”
NGO的进与退取决于地方政府的态度。在这一点上,郑珂珂深有体会。在广元市帮忙救援的时候,他遇见一位对中国教育问题颇有些“看法”的镇长。两人谈得投机,对方很快邀请他去支援当地教育建设。
几番往来,见到了分管教育的副镇长和当地主要学校校长,相互接纳的意愿已经明确,派驻志愿者进校助学的计划眼见就要达成。不曾想镇主要领导职务调动,原镇长一走,分管教育的副镇长第二天就知会郑珂珂,合作暂停,理由是“新镇长对这事儿有不同看法”。
同样的尴尬出现在都江堰。郑珂珂为当地一所全部被震毁的小学提供救助,此后向他们提出派驻志愿者。学校表示欢迎。在未向当地官方汇报的情况下,去年6月初,两位志愿者正式进入学校工作。
“校长特别好,叮嘱我们不要说自己是志愿者,就说是支教老师。白天没事儿就在帐篷里呆着,别乱跑,以免让人看到生面孔。”
事有不虞,学校一位老师向镇政府告发了这件事情,校长只好打电话让郑珂珂把志愿者领走。
透过官方系统疏通并不管用。为了在灾区立足,他们通过渠道找到四川省委的主要领导,该领导给地方的市委书记打了一个电话,市委书记再给当地教委打电话,约好见面。郑珂珂一方的3个人就从成都坐火车去了,见了面,不仅没有握手寒暄,地方教育官员坐在那里连站起来的意思都没有。这一次,就算有书记的话支持,合作同样没能成功。
“随便一个理由就把你推出来了。他如果想改变,就要千方百计和你合作,他如果不想改变,我就是给他一个班装一个投影仪,他也不干。”
郑珂珂抱着一种碰运气的想法,认为灾区面积如此之大,一地碰壁再换一地,总有去处。就这样,他坚持了接近一年。
不过,由于官方对NGO的管理正在加强,未来的不确定性一直存在。在绵竹市遵道镇开展社会救助工作的罗世鸿说,也许以后当灾区社会问题越来越多,官方会觉得应该让更多社会机构帮着他们做些事情。
绵竹市团委和青年志愿者协会在今年4月发出一则通知,要求加强对志愿服务团队和个人的管理。通知声称,在地震周年来临之际,将会有大量志愿者涌入,不排除别有用心的人打着志愿者旗号开展影响社会稳定的活动。
通知表示,他们已对一些机构和志愿者个人进行了核实和清理,并将继续。他们要求志愿者个人和服务团队进行再次登记,以确定服务时间、服务对象和服务方式。此外,当地官方各部门被要求掌握那些志愿者团队的详细人员名单。
鉴于这种情况,很多组织不得不选择离开。灾区的NGO绝对数量正在下降。以遵道镇为例,罗世鸿介绍说,在最高峰时期的动员例会上,NGO组织的与会数量有一两百个之间,这种情况保持了两三个月,现在也就十一二个了。
罗世鸿所在机构没有注册。最开始进入遵道的时候,他们与当地政府保持了愉快而紧密的合作。当时他们和镇政府在同一场地办公,为了发挥这些社会资源在灾后重建中的作用,遵道镇政府成立了以镇党委书记为组长的“遵道社会资源协调小组”。罗世鸿等加入到这个小组的办公室工作,镇政府还为他们挂了牌,并给了一枚公章。
一切变化似乎来得太快。本来他们还准备在绵竹团市委注册登记,这件事已是被认可的,但当团市委那个通知突然出炉之后,全部打算都泡了汤。镇政府不再允许他们继续在自己的办公室里呆下去,将他们逐到了板房区。他们还将与那个半政府性质的协调小组办公室脱钩。
“我们准备撤出来,”协调办公室的前期负责人之一、罗世鸿的团队成员汪跃云说,“与当初相比,现在灾区不再欢迎志愿者。从去年8月份开始,我们就都比较清楚了,这个趋势是必然的。”
在一份有关退出那个协调办公室的报告中,他们也写道,“在党委和政府的领导下,遵道镇正逐步恢复生机,回到以往和谐发展的生活中去。我们作为志愿者,所能做的事情会逐步变得有限。在这样的发展形势下,我们将结束在遵道镇近一年的志愿服务工作。”
这,也许将成为一种常态。
在什邡市洛水镇一个大规模灾民安置点,管委会已经接到官方的指示,他们将把驻在小区内提供3岁以下婴儿洗浴帮助的“英国儿童救助会”的人员“请走”。
管委会主任表示,他们把是否为老百姓办实事作为判断一个组织优劣的标准,他们认为救助会不符标准,打着志愿者的旗号什么事也不干,还占据着灾区极为紧俏的板房。
目前灾区的安置小区几乎都成立了管委会,由一些体制内的抗震救灾“先进分子”充任成员,他们的职能是管理安置区内的所有事务,其中一项即过问外界人员和组织的进驻与往来。
洛水镇这位管委会主任一直对这些人保持着高度关注。
“我们也怕发生一些意外和麻烦。你也看到了,我们这里的人心态很好,外人进来问这问那的,没必要。”她说,“谁知道他们打什么主意。”

要让人放心
在同一个安置点,也有一些组织深得官方欣赏。NGO备灾中心就是这样。管委会主任对他们的评价是,“他们还是做了一些实事的,老百姓看得见,都比较认可。”
这个机构据称是由这位主任介绍给当地官方的。当他们试图在安置点开展工作的时候,找到了她。她告诉他们,你们要进入这里,起码要和政府搞好关系。
NGO备灾中心的执行主任张国远说,我们进入地方开展工作比较顺利,在资金和政策方面几乎不存在压力。
赠予亚洲和托克国际两个组织今年向灾区分别投入资金开展项目,NGO备灾中心成为他们的项目执行机构。他们得到300万元项目资金,有200万准备投入到洛水,政府无偿辟出一片土地,让他们建立创业基地。另外100万用于支持境内草根组织工作。有9个组织在招标阶段得到了他们的资金配给,已经在NGO备灾中心的驻在安置点开始工作。
张国远和另外一些成员原是四川地方的公务员,对体制内的情况非常了解,能较为顺畅地与官员们进行沟通与谈判。他认为这是他们能够搞好官方关系的最大优势。
“你知道,与政府官员的交流和沟通需要在一个特定环境下进行。以前我们和官方交流很多,合作也密切。他们说出来的一些话直译过来意思和他内心要表达的意思是不一样的。”他说,“有时候存在潜规则,你能听懂就很好,听不懂就很麻烦,需要进入他们的语境。”
张国远现在在汉旺和洛水分设了两个办公室。当他准备设点的时候,先派了一两个人前去与当地人同吃同住同玩,相互熟悉并建立信任,了解社区情况和需求后,建立办公室也就水到渠成了。
现在他们和当地官方、居民亲如邻居。管委会为他们的办公室挂了牌。他们自己在总结时,谈到了特别重要的两点经验:一、他们的全部工作人员都是四川本地人,这有助于消除沟通距离,产生一种亲和力;二、他们做地方特别是官方需要的事情。比如设立创业基金,为当地人提供创业培训。众所周知,就业一直是令地方政府头疼的问题,如果能够通过培训提升人们的创业技能,地方政府的压力会减轻许多。这也是他们的政绩。
不过,即使这样,官方也不完全对他们放心。那位管委会主任对本刊记者说,镇政府的领导有时候也会问起,这个机构都在干些什么呢?神神秘秘的样子。
“一定要让他们知道我们的存在,我们在做和将做什么,”在汉旺的项目办公室,NGO备灾中心的管理人员张伟看看墙上一堆政府官员的联络信息说,“我们会定期将工作进度报告抄送给官方。”
官方对于NGO的拒绝更多时候是因为他们觉得没有把握。研究人士认为,在地震之初,政府之所以允许诸多机构涌入,是因为他们被巨大灾害拖住了身子,无法分散更多精力。他们乐观其成,也需要这些外力共济灾民,直到有精力应付这些额外事务为止。
“在多数地方,外来人员不属于他的管辖范围,他们不知道你会在当地怎么样,把你弄走了他就放心了,”高圭滋说,“在整个灾区,这方面有一些共通的东西。”
高圭滋所在的四川512民间救助服务平台成立于地震发生之后,旨在为许多寻求进入灾区的NGO提供信息和资源整合一类帮助。通过他们进入灾区的NGO据说超过100家。
官方对于NGO的排斥也与一些NGO或志愿者自身不洁有关联。在都江堰,官方曾抓获5名“志愿者”,他们在灾区无所事事,领取各种物资后搭起帐篷,白天睡觉,晚上出门。这引起有关方面的怀疑,他们查出这些人携有撬锁工具。
“这5个人真他妈的……”郑珂珂说,“现在我们尽量回避志愿者称号,只说自己是支教老师。”
绵竹团市委的那份通知也提及,有一小部分人打着志愿者的旗号做一些违背志愿者精神的事情。对那些违法乱纪的个人和团队将取消服务资格,予以清退,或移送法办。
这只是一根导火索,官方真正担心的还是外来志愿者对于当地居民情绪的干扰与影响。在通常没有外人的情况下,他们只需要控制住现场,切断各种信息传播渠道,任何事态都可以掌握,不被扩大。外来机构对他们的这种做法构成挑战。
在一些死亡人数过大特别是学校倒塌过甚的地方,志愿者成为家长们倾诉的对象。这些人是他们认为唯一可以信赖的。这时候,一些年轻志愿者有可能加入到控诉行列,鼓励家长们主张权利。在都江堰,有200位失去孩子的家长曾经情绪激动试图上访,结果全部被武力架回。还不清楚,是否有志愿者参与其中。郑珂珂也认为,志愿者在灾区的工作技巧有待提高。
“你得明白实际情况是什么、该做什么、不该做什么。”他说,“你不代表你个人,你是一个群体,要抛开个人情绪,要有技巧。”

可持续难题
NGO自身的能力建设水平也决定了他们在灾区能走多远。早在地震之初,即使官方未加干扰,就境内草根组织而言,能力的薄弱也制约了他们的发挥水准。
罗世鸿对此颇有感触。他说,“我们总是相信有钱就能搞定一切,有物资就可以帮助别人,但慢慢就发现,这个想法是错的。”
在紧急救援阶段,国内外的物资源源不断输送到灾区,仅一个镇就超千万甚至过亿吨。这时候,如何分配物资就是对NGO能力的一种考量。它涉及物流体系、仓储管理、社区调查,只有具备这些专业素养,才能确保公平高效地分发。在遵道镇,罗世鸿等人需要服务2万人,他们有一个100多人的志愿者团队,最终还是乱作一团。
与他们相比,一些境外组织的专业和高效令人叹为观止。以西班牙人和英国人为例,西班牙小组负责供水,他们只派了3个人。在进行一番技术和专业整合之后,计算出每人每天需要喝多少水、洗漱多少水,基本保障需要多少升等,一番计算后,即刻架起设备供给,两天就确保让15万人用上干净水。英国人的表现同样可圈可点。他们负责厕所设置。当他们知道一个安置区的具体人数后,马上会计算出多少人头需要设置一个厕所,一个厕所能覆盖多大安置点,并相应配备哪些硬件设施。
紧急救援阶段很快过去,灾区进入重建阶段。对于很多NGO来说,方向发生了转变,必须进入社区工作。这要求他们具备凭借专业技能进行持久作战的能力,仅靠一腔热情是不够的。
去年10月以后,罗的团队开始对志愿者成员进行日常工作方法培训,他们认为这件事情不能再拖了。更多组织也像他们一样,依然在路上摸索。
如果不能使自己的综合能力在短期内得到强化与提升,他们只好从灾区黯然收场。这种综合能力包括运作资金的可持续、专业人才的充实以及组织内部管理的有序。
以资金为例,很多组织不具备筹资能力,没有人给他们资助。一种常见的节省成本的办法是,组织内的每个志愿者需要承担各自的费用,所在组织不为此埋单。在什邡,重庆市助老助残志愿者服务总队的团委书记张斐告诉本刊记者,AA制是灾区NGO的普遍做法,这样组织就没有负担了。
最初拥有的参与热情,可以支持志愿者自掏腰包献几周爱心,但却很难长久。“生存都是问题,”乐施会四川办公室的负责人翟凡说,“就像每个家庭要过日子一样,没有资金,想都不要想。”
乐施会是唯一一家拿到官方批文可以在灾区工作的国际组织,震后在成都设立了办公室。他们计划在未来3到5年内投入逾1.3亿港币参与灾区重建,为当地改善小型基础设施和生计状况。资金不是问题。不过即便如此,他们的服务对象和能力也是有限的。灾区的需求空白太多了,没有任何一家组织能够全部包揽。他们所能做的和别的NGO一样,无非是以政府的强大力量和覆盖面为背景,做好配合工作。
“我们也在坚持,”翟凡说,“到底有多久,也难以说清。”
就目前来看,还有一些NGO或志愿者个人寻求进入灾区工作。四川512民间救助服务中心提醒他们,一定要考虑清楚,事先做好充分准备,否则不要贸然行动。中心的协调人之一田军说,他们很想帮助别人,但要做好可持续的、长期呆下去的打算,“当做好事成为一种压力的时候,你会很痛苦,受助者也是。”
即将离去的汪跃云看起来就很无奈。一年来他们一直“在努力、在尽力、在成长”,只是很多设想都没有展开,就要终结了。他说他们将被当地的老百姓慢慢淡忘,因为并没有如预期那样对社区产生什么深远影响,彼此间的信任都还来不及建立。
不过,他又极肯定地断言,由于政府提供的服务(特别是软性层面的服务)不能覆盖全部群体与角落,在起到补充与替代作用的NGO陆续离开之后,灾区的潜在需求因不得满足而导致的后果可能会在更长的时间里显现。
最近北川县委宣传部一位副部长的自杀就引起了社会强烈反弹。当地政府已经发文要求分门别类摸清官员的精神状态,深化干部关爱工作。
在什邡市的一个安置点,一位灾民对记者说,我们需要这些人(NGO)。
那是一个晚上,音乐节奏轻快,很多心情不错的灾民在橙红色灯光下跳舞。那片开阔的用帐篷搭建起来的场地是一家NGO组织为他们开辟的娱乐中心。
灾民说,“他们的办事效率比政府要高。”
目前还没有人对NGO在灾区的作用进行一个全面客观的评估,但需求、信任甚至是依赖的确存在。
“有个老乡蹲在家门口,看到对面田坎上有人路过,一看不是本地人,就能判断那是志愿者,心里就有安慰,知道还有人在关心他,人还没有走完。”高圭滋说,“志愿者不需要做什么事情,也不需要和他打招呼,只需要从那里路过,也许就能挽救一条生命。”

Xinhua: Beichuan tourism plan approved

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Beichuan tourism plan approved

Sichuan province’s Beichuan county, which was devastated by last May’s earthquake, aims to become an internationally renowned travel destination for its Qiang ethnic minority culture, quake ruins and legacy as Xia Dynasty founder Dayu’s birthplace, the county’s tourism development master plan said.

The plan yesterday passed appraisal by more than 40 experts nationwide and officials from Sichuan.

It called for constructing tourism infrastructure from 2009 to 2011.
Tourism would develop dramatically from 2012 to 2015 until Beichuan became a top-class domestic tourist destination, while it would become an internationally leading site for earthquake ruins from 2016 to 2020, the plan said.

The plan also said Beichuan must develop three or four attractions appealing to overseas visitors. Its project list includes an earthquake museum, an ethnic Qiang street and a plaza showcasing local ethnic minority culture. The plan, which the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences’ tourism research center developed over eight months, will go to the provincial government for approval before post-quake tourism reconstruction begins, said Zhang Jie, an information officer for Mianyang, which administrates Beichuan.

Beichuan was among the counties most devastated by the May 12 earthquake. Of the nearly 70,000 people who died, more than 10,000 were in the county.

Beichuan is the country’s only Qiang autonomous county. It was home to about 90,000 Qiang people prior to the quake, but about 10 percent of them died in the disaster, the county’s publicity department deputy chief Wang Jian said.

The ethnic group is known for living in stone towers resembling fortresses and for worshiping the goat – an animal revered as the god of food and clothing.

Beichuan is best known as the birthplace of Dayu, the legendary founder of the Xia Dynasty (21st century-16th century BC).

Xinhua: Students from Sichuan quake epicentre to return for new terms

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Students from Sichuan quake epicentre to return for new terms

More than 10,000 students forced to study elsewhere will return to newly-built schools in their hometown, Wenchuan County, the epicentre of the massive earthquake last May in southwest China’s Sichuan Province, local officials said Sunday.

Ninety-five percent of the school reconstruction in Wenchuan is expected to be finished before September 1 when the new term begins, said Hu Zheng’an, Wenchuan Education Bureau head.

Students of four primary schools continued their education in prefabricated houses in Wenchuan, while most of the nearly 16,000 students across the county moved to other cities or provinces after the 8.0-magnitude earthquake which left more than 87,000 people dead or missing and millions homeless.

The county made a fresh new program of the school building with more than 2.2 billion yuan budgeted. As one of the first to start reconstruction, the Sanjiang Primary School will resume classes for all the 360 pupils on May 12, the first anniversary of the earthquake, Hu said.

Currently, more than 300 workers are working in the construction site of a primary school around the clock in Yanmen Township.

“Construction of a school covering more than 10,000 square meters normally takes a year, but we plan to finish it within six months so that students can come back to school earlier,” said Huang Guangcan, the project manager. “We must strengthen supervision to ensure the quality of the project.”

Wenchuan earthquake survivors to move into new houses by 2009

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

The Chinese government has promised to help survivors of last year’s devastating Wenchuan earthquake to move into new houses before the end of this year, according to a human rights document published here on Monday.
The rebuilding of collapsed or seriously destroyed farmers’ houses will be basically completed to ensure they can “move into new houses by the end of December 2009,” says the National Human Rights Action Plan of China (2009-2010).The government will take a series of measures to provide jobs for over 1 million people in the restoration areas, with emphasis on finding a job for at least one member of each jobless family, according to the document, published by the Information Office of the State Council, or Cabinet.
In these areas, the state will ensure urban residents’ average disposable income and rural residents’ average net income surpassing the levels before the earthquake, with a secured basic living standard for all people in the quake-devastated areas, says the action plan.
The government will rebuild and restore elementary and middle schools to a higher safety level, and priority is given to restoring and rebuilding county-level hospitals and public service institutions for disease prevention and control, women’s and children’s health care and family planning, as well as township-level clinics and township family planning service centers.
“Persistently supervising and checking the use of relief funds and materials to ensure that they are all sent to and used for people in the disaster-hit areas and for the smooth progress of the rehabilitation and reconstruction work”, says the action plan.

20090408: Xinhua: Seeking art to help Sichuan kids, build schools

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Seeking art to help Sichuan kids, build schools
www.chinaview.cn  2009-04-08 09:16:22

BEIJING, April. 8 — It’s been nearly a year, but the horrible Sichuan earthquake still haunts like nightmare, especially for the children who lost their families.
A major charity art auction, including masterpieces by Xu Beihong and Zhu Ming, will run from May 30 to 31 to raise money to “build nine schools and help child survivors of the Sichuan earthquake,” according to Chongyuan Art Auction House, the local co-organizer.
The sale will offer at least 170 works, including traditional ink-wash paintings, sculptures and canvases from many artists and collectors both in Shanghai and Taiwan, says Ji Chongjian, owner of the local auction house.
More works are welcome and the support of businesses, collectors and individuals is encouraged.
“Besides the money raised from this charity auction, we will also donate our commission to aid those children,” says Ji.
Works received to date include a scroll jointly painted by famed local artists Chen Jialing, Xie Chunyan and others.
The auction is organized by the Tzu Chi Foundation, a nonprofit organization founded in 1966 by Dharma Master Cheng Yen in Hualien, Taiwan.

The charity art auction will be the first major exposure of the Tzu Chi Foundation Shanghai.
In May last year, Tzu Chi donated 500 million yuan (73.53 million U.S. dollars) in financial assistance to Wenchuan, the earthquake epicenter.
In the immediate aftermath, Tzu Chi provided support, including hot food, for survivors and rescue workers.
“Most important, we try to comfort people and help them heal from the trauma,” says Master Cheng Yen.
Volunteers took frightened children to tents and soothed them through talking and massage.
At hospitals volunteers served as “good listeners for the exhausted medical staff and rescue workers who were in great need of a shoulder to cry on,” says the master.

Tzu Chi volunteers went worldwide to help survivors of the Sichuan quake. They went to 1,900 locations in 23 countries, going out onto the streets with donation boxes.
“Whether they received a large bill or just a single coin, the volunteers bowed in gratitude,” says Master Cheng Yen. “They worked with a humble heart and showed sincere respect to all who made donations.
“This is the power of love,” the master says.
Tzu Chi is an international, volunteer-led, charitable organization providing humanitarian aid, spiritual care and medical services to families and communities locally and internationally. It focuses on charitable services, medical services, education and cultural services.
Tzu Chi claims more than 13 million volunteers around the globe.
Volunteers have worked in disaster relief on the Chinese mainland since 1991 when devastating floods hit central and eastern China. The organization was officially recognized and registered as a charitable body in March 2008.
Master Cheng Yen calls relief work on the Chinese mainland as “building a bridge of love.”
Tzu Chi has worked in charity, medicine, education, environmental protection, promotion of humane values and community volunteer work.
“Of course, we need many collectors and entrepreneurs to join in. Without them, the goodwill can’t be realized,” she says.
Chongyuan Art Auction House maintains all art donations.
In Shanghai’s Putuo District, the Tzu Chi group is helping elderly and widowed people by giving them a regular living allowance, says one volunteer, declining to be identified.
“Love is the sole driving force in our mission,” she says. “Only through an open loving heart can we truly change the world into a better place for all, alleviate the suffering of mankind, and reverse the trend of violence and destruction.”

Date: May 30-31
Venue: Westin hotel, 88 Henan Rd M.
Call 5403-8051 for more information
Master Cheng Yen and Tzu Chi Foundation
Born Wang Jinyun in 1937 in Taichung County, Taiwan, Master Cheng Yen’s first contact with Buddhist Dharma came when she was 23 and searching for a burial place for her father, who has died of a stroke suddenly.
She founded the Buddhist Compassion Relief Tzu-Chi Foundation, commonly known as Tzu Chi, in 1966. Its motto: “Instructing the rich and saving the poor.”
Tzu Chi means “serving with compassion.”
Later, Cheng Yen’s charity, medical, education and culture missions developed. Today the Tzu Chi Foundation takes part in international disaster relief, bone marrow donation campaigns, environmental protection and community volunteering of many kinds.

20090413: Xinhua: Employment, social support in the aftermath

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Feature: Restless recovery on post-quake Sichuan

www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-12 13:35:26

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-04/12/content_11172347.htm

By Gong Yidong, China Features

BEIJING, April 12 (Xinhua) — Liu Daihe, 43, lights a cigarette passed by his cousin Liu Daishu and spreads the mahjong tiles over the table. Puffing smoke into the 20-square-meter temporary house, he settles down to idle away another day with friends and relatives.

It is a typical snapshot on the 11,000-household interim community to the north of Mianzhu, one of the most damaged cities of the May 12 earthquake that left more than 80,000 Chinese dead or missing. Liu and the 40,000 inhabitants are enveloped in an atmosphere of both hope and ennui that contrasts with a clearly felt grief eight months ago.

Demands of life
Before the catastrophe, Liu was a phosphorous miner for many years at Qingping town of Mianzhu. But the mine, one of the local pillar industries, was swallowed by the quake along with Liu’s job.
As the breadwinner of the family, Liu looked for jobs elsewhere, but was turned down because of his age. “I’m not competitive on the market. More importantly, I don’t have technical skills, except from doing hard labor in the pit.”
The assistance is also dwindling. Last year, the government handed out 200 yuan per person a month for eight months and 33.5 kilograms of grain per head for three months, but all the financial and material support ended in January, says Liu. “Nowadays, around 15 percent of the people in the community live on what they had before,” his cousin says.
The price of commodities has climbed due to rising transport costs, and Liu and his wife, Chen Mingfang, have to rack their brains to make ends meet.
What worries the couple most is their 14-year-old son and 18-year-old daughter, who are studying at secondary school.
Changying, the daughter, will take the national college entrance examination this summer, meaning a lot of money will be needed if she is enrolled into university. This term alone, she paid 2,000-plus yuan for tuition fees and living expenses.
Her brother, Chenglin, pays 9 yuan a day for three meals in the school canteen as part of a boarder scheme.
Liu’s mother-in-law, who lives under the same roof, is covered by neither a pension nor the rural cooperative medical care. Liu is relieved that the past winter was mild compared with the previous year.

“Otherwise, she might have caught a severe cold,” he says.

In the end, Liu was forced to accept employment in a private mine hundreds of miles away in Yibin, southern Sichuan, where he was paid 80 yuan a day to work from 4 a.m. to 4 p.m..

The pay was satisfactory, but the toil and loneliness in a strange city were intolerable. The man of few words killed time by playing mahjong with his colleagues, and sometimes, small-time gambling.

Unlike many parts of Sichuan where the natural conditions are harsh, Mianzhu has fewer people moving to big cities like Beijing or Guangzhou for job opportunities.

“Before the quake, Mianzhu was blessed with favorable conditions, with no storms or landslides, and most of us preferred to stay in our hometown,” says Liu Daishu.

Adding to their sense of security was the multitude of industries sprawling across the city, such as the national key companies Dongfang Turbine, Lonmon Chemicals and Jiannanchun Distillery, which absorbed a large number of local workers.” We are used to the pace of ease here,” says Daishu.

Statistics from the Bureau of Labor Resources and Social Security of Mianzhu confirm that around 20,000 people are working outside Sichuan Province, accounting less than one tenth the total labor force.

Before the Spring Festival, Liu returned and worked at another small mine in the adjacent city of Shifang, which was set up by one of his fellow villagers.

20090401: Xinhua: Rebuilding of school destroyed in Sichuan quake to start on 1st anniversary

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Rebuilding of school destroyed in Sichuan quake to start on 1st anniversary
www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-01 14:56:36
Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake

MIANYANG, Sichuan, April 1 (Xinhua) — The reconstruction of Beichuan Middle School, one of the schools that sustained the most damage in last year’s earthquake in China’s southwestern Sichuan Province, will start May 12, the first anniversary of the earthquake, officials said Wednesday.
The new school, mostly funded by donations from Chinese all over the world, will be built in Beichuan’s new county seat, said Liu Qi, an official with the All-China Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese (ACFROC), which was in charge of aiding the rebuilding.
Officials will choose a design from submissions by leading universities including Tsinghua and Tongji as well as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Hong Kong University, he said.
More than 1,300 of the school’s 2,900 students and teachers were killed or left missing in the rubble of the collapsed buildings in the Wenchuan 8.0-magnitude earthquake. Surviving students have attended classes in temporary pre-fab structures since shortly after the disaster.
Overseas Chinese have donated nearly 200 million yuan (29 million U.S. dollars) since August when the donation campaign began, Liu said.
The new school will cover about 13 hectares and is expected to enroll more than 5,000 students.
An ACFROC official arrived in Sichuan Tuesday and will work with the local government on construction, he said.
The reconstruction of Beichuan County, one of the worst-hit areas in the quake, began in February. The new seat is between Yong’an Township and Anchang Township, about 23 km from the former county seat.

20090401: Xinhua: Official, expert explain plans for controversial quake museum

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Official, expert explain plans for controversial quake museum
www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-01 20:17:26

Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake

CHENGDU, April 1 (Xinhua) — A public controversy over spending on a proposed earthquake museum in southwest China’s Sichuan Province has prompted officials to come forward and defend the plans.
The 2.3-billion-yuan (338 million-U.S.-dollar) plan reported by local media comprised costs of other projects in addition to the Beichuan County Earthquake Museum, near the epicenter of last year’s May 12 quake, said Lin Jizhong, deputy director of the county’s Culture and Tourism Bureau Wednesday.
The museum itself would only cost 135 million yuan (20 million U.S. dollars), said Lin.
The news of the plan provoked a public outcry on the Internet after local newspapers reported in late March.
Many people contended that a museum was necessary, but as the province was in dire need of money for reconstruction, investing such a huge amount in the museum was unwise.
Wu Changfu, head of the Shanghai-based project planning expert group which outlined the budget, said, “The money was not used solely for construction of the museum building. The environmental protection work and road construction will also be included in the plan.”
“The feasibility report of the museum is being drafted,” Wu said.
Lin said the planned museum was not just an exhibition building, but encompassed the remnants of the old county seat, and traces left by secondary disasters such as mud-rock flows and quake lakes.
The natural scenery of the Tangjiashan quake lake area and culture of the Qiang ethnic minority would also feature in the attraction.
The entire project covered 8 square kilometers, with the Beichuan Middle School at the center, Lin said.
More than 80,000 people were confirmed dead or missing after the quake.
Premier Wen Jiabao suggested when he was in Beichuan after the quake that a museum should be erected.
Lin said construction was scheduled to start later this year in fall went smoothly.
“We hope the museum can bring more revenue to local people,” he said. “The dead are dead, but we hope the living can live better lives.”

20090401: Xinhua: Beichuan opened for 4 days for Tomb Sweeping Day

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Quake-leveled China county opens to mourners
www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-01 20:34:20

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-04/01/content_11115060.htm

Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
BEICHUAN, Sichuan, April 1 (Xinhua) — The barbed wire around Beichuan’s old county seat was gone.
The county that perished in last year’s devastating earthquake reopened Wednesday morning to former residents who wished to mourn the dead ahead of the annual tomb sweeping day that falls on Saturday.
Beichuan County, which has been closed since May 20 last year, will be open for four days until Saturday.
The mourning crowd began pouring into the dead county at 7 a.m. Policemen checked everyone’s ID to make sure only natives of Beichuan were allowed into the county.
Most mourners brought incense, candles and bouquet to the ruins of former schools, homes and offices, shed tears, and spent a few hours with the deceased.
Thousands of white paper flowers and heart-shaped cards were tied to the fence encircling the collapsed building of Beichuan High School in memory of the students and teachers killed in the quake.
“I burnt some paper money for my wife last week, from atop a hill that overlooks the old county seat,” said Qiao Hong, 34. “It was her birthday.”
Almost 11 months after the disaster, Qiao was still hesitant to go back to his old place, fearing memories of his past would haunt him.
“I feel my son is still there, waiting for me to take him home from kindergarten.”
The mother and son were among at least 4,700 people listed as “missing” under the rubble of Beichuan. Plus the 15,600 confirmed deaths, the county lost two-thirds of its population in the quake.
Wednesday’s reopening of the ghost town was a real challenge for the local government. Sanitation workers had to sterilize the ruins that used to be homes, schools, teahouses and workshops; health workers and ambulances stood by, ready to provide first-aid to the grieving mourners.
The county government had to clean the streets leading to the old county seat of vendors, mostly quake survivors who eked out living selling postcards of the quake site, incense and “paper money” for the dead.
The government also arranged 10 buses that offered free rides for the mourners to travel from their new homes in the nearby city of Mianyang.
About one kilometer from his son’s kindergarten was Qiao Hong’s home, a green apartment building that used to house dozens of workers from the county’s telecom company. The building remained intact but entry was forbidden for safety considerations.
Qiao looked around and saw no policemen on patrol.
“I want to get home for a quick look,” he told reporters who followed him into the building.
A deserted PC blocked the way on the second floor. Qiao recognized it was his own. “Someone stole it,” he said.
The door to his third-floor apartment was open and the place was half empty. Before the county was closed, Qiao and his neighbors were given a few days to take away their belongings.
He didn’t take his wedding photo. So the couple remained smiling on their bedroom wall, with Qiao in a suit and tie and his wife, Mu Chunyan, in a white wedding gown.
The bedroom floor was piled with love letters he wrote to his wife nearly 20 years ago.
“We were classmates at high school,” he said, ignoring reporters’ question why he hadn’t taken the letters to his new home.
Qiao avoided entering his son’s bedroom, fearing he might collapse at the sight of the picture books and toys on the floor.
He spent 30 minutes searching through a pile of books on the balcony, before he took out two: one on gardening and the other on computer engineering.
Accidentally, he found a few pictures of his wife and son, which he carefully put away.
Qiao said he would come back home Saturday, the official tomb sweeping day.
“Any plans for the future? I don’t know for sure. Maybe I’ll marry again, sometime next year, have a child and try to live the way I used to live.”
Qiao has a girlfriend, who has been cooking and doing most household chores for him for six months.
“But it is not ripe yet.”

20090403: Xinhua: China’s quake-hit Sichuan aims to finish most rebuilding by 2010

Monday, April 6th, 2009

China’s quake-hit Sichuan aims to finish most rebuilding by 2010
www.chinaview.cn 2009-04-03 10:57:58

Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
CHENGDU, April 3 (Xinhua) — Southwest China’s Sichuan Province said it would accelerate post-quake rebuilding in an effort to finish most of the work by September 2010, a year ahead of schedule.
The goal is to complete 85 percent of the reconstruction projects and ensure “housing and employment for each family,” according to a provincial meeting for accelerating reconstruction held Thursday.
The completion targets cover more than 90 percent of transport projects, 98 percent of power grids and 99 percent of public service projects such as medical care.
The meeting said 85 percent of the rebuilding work in worst-hit areas, and all work except for some major projects in less-affected areas, would be completed by September 2010.
Reconstruction of rural housing will be completed at the end of this year, with that in townships and cities to be finished before May 2010.
Students who now attend classes in temporary building are to be back in permanent structures by next spring.
The magnitude-8.0 quake that hit southwest China, centered in Wenchuan, Sichuan, on May 12 last year, killed more than 69,000 people. It also left nearly 18,000 missing, more than 374,000 injured and millions homeless.
The Sichuan government estimated post-quake rebuilding will cost about 1.6 trillion yuan (235 billion U.S. dollars)

20090308: Xinhua: Student toll still under calculation ten months after earthquake

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Student toll still under calculation ten months after earthquake
2009-03-08 10:28:12

Wei Hong, deputy governor of Sichuan, speaks at a press conference March 8, 2009. (www.china.org.cn)

Wei Hong, deputy governor of Sichuan, speaks at a press conference March 8, 2009. (www.china.org.cn)

Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake

BEIJING, March 8 (Xinhua) – The number of students killed in the devastating May 12 earthquake in southwestern China last year is still under calculation, an official said.
“We will publicize the result after we finish the calculation,”said Wei Hong, deputy governor of Sichuan, who is attending the annual session of the Chinese legislature.

The student toll is a question relating to the number of people killed in the quake, Wei said, adding that the calculation must be carried out according to relevant regulations enacted by relevant ministries and government departments.
“Therefore it is a very complicated process. We are still investigating into and checking the number of the dead and missing. It is not easy for us to tell how many students were exactly killed in the earthquake before the accurate number of al lthe victims is confirmed,” he said at a press conference.
Earlier reports said that thousands of students had been killed in the magnitude 8.0 quake and officials were believed to bear some responsibility in relation to shoddy construction of school buildings.
After the earthquake, the government had pledged greater efforts to investigate why many schools crumbled while nearby buildings stayed erect.
It is estimated that about 87,000 people died in the earthquake.
Wei said that the province will have restored 95 percent of the collapsed school buildings by the end of 2009. Half of the campuses are now under construction in the 39 most severely-hit counties.
The province has stepped up the re-building of residential houses for farmers and citizens. “We will ensure everybody to move into new houses by the end of this year,” he said.
He added that there have been no outbursts of epidemics nor famine in the quake region. “As no social unrest was reported, we did not take any special security measures,” he said

20090302: Xinhua: China political advisors propose quake relief day to remember May 12 quake

Monday, March 9th, 2009

China political advisors propose quake relief day to remember May 12 quake

China’s political advisors have proposed to establish a national quake relief day to be remembered on May 12th every year to commemorate last year’s devastating earthquake in the country’s southwestern regions.
The setting of the special day would help the public “be alert to danger in times of peace”, said a proposal put forward by the Central Committee of the Chinese Peasants and Workers Democratic Party (CPWDP), one of China’s eight non-Communist parties.
The proposal has been submitted to the forthcoming annual session of the 11th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), scheduled to open here on Tuesday.
China is a country with frequent natural disasters including earthquakes, it said.
It suggested people to hold various activities to mourn the quake victims at 2:28 p.m. on May 12 every year, the moment when amagnitude-8.0 earthquake hit Wenchuan County in the southwestern Sichuan Province.
The quake, the most destructive natural disaster to hit China for decades, left more than 87,000 people dead or missing, millions homeless, and a huge loss of more than 845 billion yuan (about 124 billion U.S. dollars).
Venues with a high population densities, including schools, government buildings, shopping centres, and office buildings should also hold emergency evacuation drills in the context of earthquakes and other emergencies, the proposal said.

One week after the quake, China observed a nationwide three-minute silent tribute to the quake dead, the first of its kind for ordinary citizens. Such a privilege used to be reserved for state leaders.
The tribute was the highlight of a three-day official National Mourning Period, which also featured suspension of all entertainment activities, and with flags flown at half mast.
In terms of the intensity and scope of destruction, the May 12th quake is believed to have surpassed the 7.8-magnitude quake in 1976 in Tangshan city, northern Hebei Province, which claimed more than 240,000 lives.