Posts Tagged ‘death’

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.”

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

Xinhua: Mixed agony and hope for China quake survivors

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

Special report by Xinhua writers Wu Chen, Ji Shaoting:

YA’AN, Sichuan, Nov. 9 (Xinhua) – Everyone in the rehabilitation center for May 12 quake survivors in the West China Hospital wants to recover as much as possible through different therapies. Tian Fugang has a bigger dream.

The ceiling of his factory collapsed in the 8.0-magnitude earthquake, which caused nearly 70,000 deaths, and hit his lumbar vertebra. When he woke up from the coma because of the excessive pain, he could no longer feel his legs.

Now, every day, the 22-year-old former technician, who was paralyzed in the devastating quake in southwest Sichuan Province walks with special facility supporting his body for three to four hours, trains on parallel bars for half an hour and has acupuncture therapy for one hour. He has done so for nearly two months.

In the rest of the time, the thing he likes to do most is learning to use his wheelchair.

At first, he learnt different skills from the therapists, including supporting with the back wheels, getting back to the chair after falling down, moving between his wheelchair and bed, and a more difficult one, climbing stairs.

“He always managed to learn them very quickly,” said Ding Mingfu, deputy director of the rehabilitation center.

Now, Tian invented his own skill.

“I can climb a slope, which is as narrow as my wheelchair, and turn around the wheelchair on the top of it,” he said proudly, with a smile on his baby face.

The therapists found he had a talent in sports and suggested he consider to be an athlete. Tian thought it a good idea. That’s why he did a lot of training to improve his physical ability.

Next door, some ten survivors gathered to watch a soap opera. Liu Fang, 13, joined them after finishing her Chinese class upstairs. She laughed together with her wardmates when the heroine of the South Korean comedy was embarrassed by her lover. Her fair cheeks turned pink.

“She never spoke to anybody when she first came to the center two months ago, nor did she smile,” Ding Mingfu said.

The girl could only sit in a wheelchair with a belt holding her in after being paralyzed in one of the aftershocks.
“I’m much better now. I could only sit in the wheelchair for a little while two months ago, but now I can sit for two hours,” Liu said.

The rehabilitation center accepted more than 160 people who had been disabled by the quake, and some 100 people have recovered and left the center.

“Our definition for recovery is the patient’s body function has reached the highest level it can do,” Ding said.
It provided speech, occupational, acupuncture, psychological therapies and physiotherapy, as well as training for using artificial limbs.

“Rehabilitation is important for them to obtain a better life quality over the rest of their life,” Ding said, adding that without proper rehabilitation, the disabled would have a lesser ability to take care of themselves, which would be a greater burden for their families.

Local health authorities have planned a three-level rehabilitation system, composed of three provincial rehabilitation centers, six city centers and community centers.

However, as modern rehabilitation has only developed in China for less than 30 years, in comparison with the 80-year-history of the subject, China lacks professional staff, rehabilitation centers and facilities.

More than 350,000 people in Sichuan alone were injured in the quake, and among them, some 100,000 were hospitalized. Many of them are in need of rehabilitation after leaving hospitals.

However, there are not enough professional doctors, therapists and nurses for rehabilitation in the city-level centers and even no rehabilitation center in the communities, not to mention those who live in the remote mountainous areas. This time, many quake-battered regions were rural areas.

Sichuan has been providing rehabilitation therapies to nearly 6,000 people and the search for injured people who need it in remote areas is still under way, according to local health authorities.

“What we can do now is to try our best to treat every single patient we have here in the center,” Ding said, adding that they not only trained the patients with basic living skills, but also think about ways for them to live on.

Although Liu Fang still could not figure out her future, the doctors have found a job of decorator in east China’s Jiangsu Province for her father.

“At least the family can have a stable income in the future to support her,” Ding said.

The therapists also sent Tian Fugang’s information to local disabled persons’ federation, recommending him to get professional sports training.

“I’m still waiting for the reply,” he said, adding that if there wasn’t a promising future for him, he would break up with his girlfriend, whom he had spent nearly four years with.

Tian, who loved playing football before the disaster, said he would play wheelchair basketball or wheelchair tennis if he was chosen.

“I dreamt to compete at the Paralympics one day,” he said.

(Xinhua reporter Ye Jianping in Chengdu contributes to the story)

SRSA donation of tents to Guangyuan

Saturday, June 21st, 2008

Report by Rainy, volunteering for SQR (interpreting/coordinating).

Swedish Rescue Service Agency (SRSA) donated 1093 military tents to Guangyuan, Sichuan. This is the second batch of tents that they donated where the first was an alliance-to-alliance while this one is a government-to-government one.

The donation consists of 716 accommodation tents, 63 storage tents, 203 command tents and 111 medical tents. The donation arrived in Guangyuan Lizhou District, and was unloaded into a disused factory warehouse on 14th of June by factory workers.  Three staff from SRSE were in Guangyuan from the 15th to 19th of June with two Chinese translators.

The team taught eight volunteers how to set up the four different kinds of tents. The volunteers are either going to be directing tent construction directly or teaching more volunteers for distribution in further away counties or areas — for example, villages around the severely damaged county Qingchuan and certain mountain villages along the damaged express way from Guangyuan to Qingchuan along the biggest branch of Jialing river.

The distribution plan is going to be decided by Guangyuan city council, and executed by Guangyuan Lizhou District Civil Affairs Bureau along with the city Civil Affairs Bureau. The SRSA team also provided digital files of detailed manual for all four kinds of tents in Chinese and handed over more than seven hundred ready-printed manuals for the accommodation tents from Sweden, with photos and English instructions as reference.

All tents were organised by coloured spray paint in Sweden and sorted into piles by the team in Guangyuan with the help of their factory workers. The tents are donated with intention of providing temporary shelter for families, schools and medical purpose. All tents came with a heater which can also be used for cooking.  The accommodation tents also came with clothes-drying components above the stove.

Deputy Chief of the district bureau Mr Fei said that the tents will be really good for accommodation in remote villages where have people lost their houses but won’t move away from the place, and for village schools which both do not have the flat ground for prefabricated houses to stand on, and do not have accessibility for prefab houses to be transported in recent future.  Mr Fei also said the tents will be really good for winter sheltering for areas that need to stay in tents for a longer time.

Tent distribution will be followed up with the provincial Civil Affairs Bureau and Mr Xie. The condition of the buildings within the Guangyuan City is not too bad. Mainly due to fear of aftershocks, quite a lot of people are living in self-constructed tents on the main streets, some in disaster relief or donated tents.

In the older part of the town an area of about three blocks of houses was quite seriously damaged. The buildings had major cracks were clearly seriously distorted/crooked but have not collapsed.  The city did not suffer large numbers of deaths or injuries but large numbers of buildings were identified by experts as in danger. An owner of a seriously damaged house expressed her worry of losing the house, which is everything they own. Most people are able to get most of their belongings out of their houses. Shops are open, although one consequence of the earthquake has narrowed the range of products on sale.  No internet cafes are open at this stage but internet cards are working.

Interview with Lee M.

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

On Sunday 8th June ’08 SQR chatted to Lee, who has been volunteering for SQR and in charge of many of the trips out into the earthquake zone, organising and sourcing materials, arranging transport, liaising with local communities and buying beer for the volunteers. SQR strolled into the Bookworm just as Lee and other volunteers had returned from …

Lee
We went to Baiguo Village near Hanwang. Just before you go into Hanwang, you turn left and you’re pretty much there. It’s looking better there than before. Its buildings are rubble of course. We went with iboughtashelter.com, who have their own design of temporary tents.
SQR
How did they get in touch with Sichuan Quake Relief?
Lee
They contacted us after reading about us on the web. Baiguo is in an area north west of Mianzhu and Hanwang that we have delivered aid to previously, and each time we have spoken to the people who live there, which is a major part of the reason to go on trips out there, to build up meaningful links with local communities. They asked for our advice and this is one of the areas we suggested.
SQR
How did you choose that area?
Lee
There is a real need for these tents almost everywhere. The tent is a really decent construction. Getting lots of them put up quickly and properly is just about practice. We took some trucks, a jeep, all in all 20 people, including Mike, Lucy, Lydia, Angel, me, Sam and Luke and others. We use one-tonne trucks. They are small, easy to get through, and we have a good relationship with the drivers.
SQR
You’ve been going out there for three weeks now. Do you now have a fairly standard procedure for approaching the various sites and setting down deliveries?
Lee
It has changed over the few weeks we’ve been going. There are police checkpoints in many places, at every major turning and every at major entry and exit point into an area. The officers who dealt with us today were from Gansu, and so are all outsiders. They stop foreigners to check what we are up to. When I chat to them and show them my passport, and a letter showing that we are helping people in the area. If you greet them with a decent attitude, they are fine. We let them know we are heading up to the village(s).
SQR
What do you tell people when they ask you what it’s like?
Lee
The area is a lot better than it used to be. Three weeks ago this area had the smell of death, an air of desperation, and everyone wanted food and shelter. That kept going for a couple of weeks. Now that the frequency of the major shocks has lessened, people are actually looking past that and facing up to reality, which is a terrible thing as well, but it makes them get on with life. Their loved ones have gone, dead, their children are dead, their houses have gone, and their livelihood has gone as well.
SQR
What were those tents for today?
Lee
Accommodation. The farmers there have food and water, but really need shelter. They are working on their farms, getting on with life. Almost immediately after the earthquake, people started to work on their land again. We also took up a load of toys and games at the beginning of June. The kids absolutely adored that. Water and food is getting through. The government is giving each person rice and other basic foodstuffs and water.
SQR
In the first three weeks after the quake, Sichuan Quake Relief concentrated on delivering emergency relief, water, and different types of food to give a small amount of dietary variety for some. What are the priorities now?
Lee
Now we’re looking long term and in particular at providing shelters at this period of time, so it’s a good thing the guys from iboughtashelter.com are here. You can get twelve people in one of the tents. Using tarps is always going to mean that heat is a problem. Any tent made of that material is like a small greenhouse, but they are working on the ventilation issue, and it will be sorted.
SQR
What was the reaction of the villagers to the new tents?
Lee
They loved the tents, they all helped. The tents are great and the response has been absolutely marvellous. They have a thousand people to accommodate there, and so we’ll visit again.
SQR
Any particular moments you remember from today’s trip?
Lee
Permits are very important and the police spoke to us four times, and were very positive, pleasant and professional and even mentioned a village in Gansu that we might visit to help. After putting up the tents, as we were leaving, they all waved to us, and the police came and saluted us. The police specifically drove up to us to thank us and salute us and were almost teary-eyed. It was pretty moving. They were senior officers and they were saluting us.
SQR
What are the plans for the near future?
Lee
Three hundred or more tents will be sent from Shanghai. They are specifically designed for this emergency. SQR’s role is to recommend places to take them, and get in touch with the village leaders. There are thousands of people to accommodate, so there’s plenty to do.
SQR
Any signs of normal life returning?
Lee
There are some. Kids are smiling. People’s income there is from farming, so people are working and there is work to do. People are smiling, sitting around, happily joking and laughing. Obviously they are friendly because we are helping them. Obviously the atmosphere is still so sad, but people are facing reality.

If you would like to volunteer, please contact SQR at The Bookworm or email info@sichuan-quake-relief.org.