Posts Tagged ‘dead’

SAME Camps – huge success in difficult circumstances.

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

360 volunteers from China and abroad taught more than 4000 kids in 13 camps organised by SQR in various locations around the affected areas.

The SAME (Sports, Arts, Music, English) camps have been hugely oversubscribed, both in terms of those attending and in terms of volunteers, and have been a lot of fun, a lot of hard work and well worth the effort put in by all involved.

SQR sends huge thanks to all our volunteers who worked under difficult and sometimes dangerous conditions.

This summer in the quake zone, there have been large aftershocks, horrendous rock and mud slides, and many bridges and roads in the area were blocked.  The extraordinary torrential rains caused 11,000 homes to collapse in the past week alone, and scores of local residents died.  It is a timely reminder that, whilst incredible progress has been made in the reconstruction effort, there is still an enormous amount of work to be done in building up an effective infrastructure in this beautiful area, in terms of roads, bridges, schools, clinics, hospitals and other facilities.

All volunteers were camping, with no hot water available.  To compensate, however, there was often a plentiful supply of warm buzzing mosquitoes (thanks to them for committing to the project), and heavy rains on tap pretty much permanently in recent weeks.  The volunteers and kids showed great good humour and determination to enjoy themselves.

For the volunteers, life really was not easy at times, but they managed to keep the kids occupied and entertained for a week at a time, which is an achievement in any conditions at all.  It is wonderful to see such a tremendous effort from so many people, from students on holidays, from people giving up time from work and their families to help out, from people travelling large distances from all over the country and all over the world to make a contribution.  The SAME (Sports, Arts, Music, English) camps have made a difference.

Thanks to the hundreds of people who contacted SQR to volunteer, and thanks to those we said ‘no’ to as well – there were simply too many volunteers.  To stay in the loop for future volunteering opportunities, email mark@sichuan-quake-relief.org to be included on the SQR newsletter mailing list.

If you took part in the camps and have stories and photos, please email mark@sichuan-quake-relief and we’ll get them up on our Flickr account (www.flickr.com/sichuanquakerelief) and on the SQR website (www.sichuan-quake-relief.org)

Thanks again

SQR

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.”

NY Times: Garbled Report on Sichuan Death Toll Revives Pain

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

Report by Andrew Jacobs for the New York Times, November 21, 2008:

BEIJING — The news conference on Friday was meant to explain how far the government had come in helping victims of the earthquake that devastated Sichuan Province last May. More than 200,000 homes have been rebuilt, 685,000 are under reconstruction and $441 billion will be spent in the coming years to help make Sichuan whole again, Wei Hong, the provincial vice governor, told reporters.

But a garbled translation of Mr. Wei’s words ended up shifting public attention from reconstruction efforts to unresolved questions about how many children perished beneath the rubble of their poorly built schools.

Asked about the final student death toll by a foreign reporter, Mr. Wei gave a lengthy answer that ended with the figure 19,065 — more than double previous estimates and one that would suggest that a quarter of earthquake victims were schoolchildren. Lest there be any doubt, the official English translation of Mr. Wei’s remarks placed the word “student” after the figure 19,065.

The news was immediately picked up by the foreign and Chinese news media. Within hours it was even posted on the central government’s main Web site. In a country where official statistics are often taken with a grain of salt, the figure seemed to be a stunningly frank admission that the earthquake’s toll on children had been even more horrific than anyone imagined.

Later, however, the government issued a clarification, insisting that Mr. Wei’s remarks were flubbed by his translator. The figure 19,065 applied to the number of positively identified victims, it said, not the number of dead students.

For now, the official death toll from the quake stands at 69,227, with 18,222 missing. A government spokesman said the authorities were still working on a final tally of dead students. In the past, the government has said that 7,000 classrooms were destroyed across the province.

Coming six months after the 7.9-magnitude earthquake, the episode has refocused attention on aspects of a national catastrophe that the government would rather forget. Although an investigative committee acknowledged in September that many of the schools that crumbled were shoddily constructed, the government has yet to issue a full report.

The subject remains a difficult one in China. The official narrative surrounding the quake has centered on the military’s Herculean rescue operation and the unprecedented wave of generosity by Chinese who donated their time and money to relief efforts.

But in the weeks after the quake, local officials found themselves on the defensive as grieving parents sought answers as to why so many schools collapsed while adjacent structures remained standing. The anti-riot police were called in to break up rallies, and many parents said they were offered enhanced compensation in exchange for their silence.

During his news conference, Mr. Wei was eager to move on to other issues, pointing out that two million people remained homeless and vulnerable as winter approached. “We have put at the core of our work ensuring that thousands of affected people, especially those living in extremely cold and remote rural areas, will be safe and warm through this wintertime,” he said.

People’s Daily: China publishes identities of 19,000 dead in May quake

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

From the People’s Daily:

China has published a list containing identities and other basic information of 19,065 people killed during the May earthquake in southwestern Sichuan Province, a local official said Friday.

The list includes the name, birth place, where he or she was killed and other personal information of the dead, Wei Hong, executive vice provincial governor of Sichuan told a press conference.

It is the first time for the government to announced such detailed information about the dead and more lists will be published, he said.