Posts Tagged ‘Yingxiu’

AP: China to open earthquake areas to tourists: report

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

China to open earthquake areas to tourists: report (AP)

CHINESE authorities said today they would open areas devastated by last year’s Sichuan earthquake to tourists as the region struggles to recover from the natural disaster, state media reported.

Nearly 87,000 people were killed or went missing in the May 12 magnitude 8.0 earthquake that left millions homeless and unemployed in China’s mountainous southwest region.

“There is a huge tourism market in the ruins one year after the quake,” Xinhua news agency quoted Wu Mian, deputy director of Sichuan’s tourism bureau, as saying.

“We cannot block the tourists out. We also hope the tourists watch their behaviour and not hurt the feelings of quake survivors.”

Officials hope that increased tourism will help spur rebuilding efforts in the area, it said.

SQR fact-finding mission to the Wenchuan area, part one

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

On 14th May 2009, SQR volunteers visited villages in the Wenchuan area.

20090514_Villagers setting up tents for the migrant workers they hired_002

Villagers setting up tents for the migrant workers they hired

The students in town were relocated to Luzhou and Chengdu, their new school will be put to use in September.

20090514_Caopo Central Primary School under construction

Caopo Central Primary School under construction

Matou Village and Longtan Village can be said to be better off than Lianghe. Using old Chinese wooden house structures, most houses in the village remained standing through the earthquake. There is a big mushroom-shaped plastic-covered greenhouse in Matou, and two white marble quarries in Longtan. As told by a villager of Longtan, if the road remains accessible, they won’t have to worry about buying rice or other things regarding to their basic needs. But again, they were also told not to grow too much.

20090514_On the way to Longtan Village

On the way to Longtan Village; the houses downhill belong to Lianghe Village

20090514_Yang Kai Yin_60-year-old resident of Longtan Village

Yang Kai yin, a 60-year-old resident of Longtan Village

She has four children: two sons work in Xichang, one son and a daughter stay at home, farming. Her house sustained itself in the earthquake, as did many houses in the village. After reinforcement, the house is now habitable. Though she owns a fairly large field and grow plenty of vegetables, it still concerns her that it is possible that she gets nothing back from it. “They say the village (government) is going to repair that road, and then I can’t get these vegetables and my goats out and sell.” Of the rice that government supplied her, she said, “we don’t have much left. What we have can sustain us through May to Mid-June. Then we’ll have to use a micro-loan to buy rice in town.”

20090514_Ni QuiLan resident of Longtan Village

Ni Qiulan, who lives in the same village, is in a similar situation

To repair the house, Ni’s family spent 20-30 thousand RMB, which is almost all the money they got from the government and micro-credit. Ni’s 3 grandchildren now go to school in Luzhou and Chengdu. Although the government takes care of the tuition fees and basic living expenses, “they still need some allowance, you know, when they go out with friends. Things in Chengdu are really expensive,” she said. This family hasn’t bought any rice since the earthquake. The rice provided by the government, “is not enough if you use rice for every meal. We cook corn and rice together so that it lasts longer.” At the time of writing they have about 25kg rice left, and Ni thinks it can support them until mid-June.

One problem for Longtan villagers is traffic. The hill motorway connecting Matou and Longtan is often damaged by rain and landslides, especially in the rainy season. We were told that this road has been repaired twice since it first opened after the earthquake, and the residents have to walk 2 hours to get to Lianghe to buy groceries if they can’t hitchhike.

20090514_Liu Sixiu_with the pink backpack_ chatting with Lianghe villagers on her 2-hour walk back to Longtan

Liu Sixiu (pink backpack) chatting with Lianghe villagers on her 2-hour walk back to Longtan

20090514_Remains of Yingxiu People's Hospital at the memorial site of Yingxiu

Collapsed Middle School at the memorial site of Yingxiu

The collapsed Middle School in Yingxiu, the township at the epicentre of the quake, has been turned into a 5.12 memorial. Nearly every building in Ying Xiu was destroyed and only 3,800 of the 16,000 residents survived, according to official figures.

It has taken a whole year to excavate the enormous piles of rubble that covered the valley where the town is located. The survivors, who are all now in prefabricated housing, hope that work will soon start on their new homes. Local government officials predict that Ying Xiu will become a big tourist attraction for Chinese who want to remember the May 12 disaster and visit the key sites.

20090514_Remains of Yingxiu Middle School

The Remains of Yingxiu Middle School

20090228: news.tfol.com: Ying-Wen Highway to open

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

地震一年后 都江堰到映秀只要一刻钟
2009-02-28  来源:四川在线

According to the Sichuan Freeway System Working Conference held on 27th Feb 2009, the Du-Ying (Dujiangyan to Yingxiu) Freeway will be open to traffic on 12th May this year, when it should take only 15 minutes to commute between Dujiangyan and Yingxiu. Also on 12th May, the construction of the Yingxiu-Wenchuan Freeway will begin.

The 52km Ying-Wen Freeway begins at the terminal of Du-Ying, and ends at South Wenchuan, joining the No.213 National Highway.

Meanwhile, conversion of exits was also brought up at the conference. “Such as Guang’an Dong Zhan (the east toll gate of Guang’an Exit) it has only 6 driveways, 2 entrance points and 4 exits. It is gridlock when the toll station gets crowded.” According to officials in charge, at a few toll stations the original exits will be widened and new ones will be added, if necessary, to reduce traffic congestion.

昨日,川高系统工作会传出消息,在地震中遭遇重创的都江堰至映秀高速公路将于今年5月12日通车。届时,从都江堰到映秀只要15分钟。同一天,映秀至汶川高速公路将开工建设。

新建的映汶高速起于都江堰至映秀高速公路止点,止于汶川县南侧,接国道213线。路线全长约52公里。

由于收费站路口车道太少,导致路口拥堵的问题已发生在许多高速公路上。昨日,相关负责人称,今年将加宽改造车流量大、易拥堵的道口。“比如广安东站,只有6车道,2进4出无法满足车流通行。”该负责人说,还有遂回路回马出口,成雅高速新津收费站等。

Google translation of Xinhua’s article on this story

Yingxiu Wan power plant

Monday, January 5th, 2009

Translated from the original Chinese:

The No.3 generator group of the Yin Xiu Wan Power Plant, Wei Chuan, restarted its work on 19th December after 6 months and 3 days of reconstruction. The No.1 and No.2 generator group will be on working by June 2009. This will certainly make a huge difference for people in Aba Tibetan-Qiang Autonomous Prefecture, especially those in Wenchuan, through this bitter winter.

What SQR has been up to lately

Thursday, July 31st, 2008

Update sent by Lucy to SQR volunteers at end of July 2008.  The second part of the post features an email sent 14th July to SQR volunteers.

With the help of three volunteers we were able to almost finish our NGO Newsletter (right now Bingbing is translating all the English info texts about the different NGOs). We’ll hope to send out the first edition of the newsletter this weekend.

Also we got several huge maps of the quake area as a goodbye present from their NGO, those will be very useful for the next NGO meeting.

The Library Project picked two schools of the schools SQR recommended, for their libraries (one is in Qingchuan and one in Tumenzhen).

SQR was invited to take part in the reconstruction mission of the British Chamber of Commerce and attend meetings with Sichuan, Chengdu, Mianzhu, Qingchuan, Wenchuan, Dujiangyan and Mianyang government (mayors and the like). It was definitely interesting information about future government plans (also to pass onto other NGOs) and a lot of business-card swapping. Also I met two managers who might be interested in donating some money to SQR (nothing sure yet).

Today I met with a Dutch lady who has collected over 30,000 RMB and wants help to spend it in the earthquake area, so I’m working on a plan how to split up that kind of money and use it for the tent schools we work with. The only condition she had was that she could tag along when we deliver the supplies and take pictures.

I also met with Maki from Sim’s Guesthouse, who is working on a fabulous map of the affected area.  She’s going to put the SQR logo (and some other NGOs logos) on the back of the map and also is getting some help from us in proofreading some info text on the affected area for the back of the map.

Last Friday Hong, Beate and Lynda (latter is the author of the “Good Grief” booklet, of which we brought around 1000 to different tent schools) came to Chengdu. SQR had arranged a trip to two tent schools in Jiulong for them. Bingbing took them to the schools in Jiulong, since I was still busy with the reconstruction mission, and Friday I arranged for them to tag along with Rainbow project to Luoshui. Also Mark interviewed Lynda for the SQR blog.  As I chatted with Lynda and her friends later we had the idea of possibly doing a fundraising event in the beginning of September, if possible in the Bookworm. The main idea was to let Lynda read her book, get some other people to do a slideshow about the affected area (I could do that or maybe we could get a professional photographer), maybe one of our volunteer teachers to talk about his experience, do some kind of raffles or charity auction, sell lots of our postcards and calendars etc. We could also make it into a welcome back to Chengdu thing (since quite a lot of expats will be coming home or newly arriving)… It’s still a work in progress. Any suggestions and great ideas please mail to me.

Saturday I hope to go to Qingchuan to bring up two foreign volunteers and supplies to a new school and a kindergarten.

Ashley Murray got me in touch with a school in the states who would possibly like to fundraise money for us and since they’d like to get their students involved I suggested they could do some drawings and cards for the kids in the affected area, which the next foreign volunteer teachers could deliver. I’m still waiting to hear back from them.

Next Thursday we’ll have another NGO meeting with the topics healthcare/psychological help/ hygiene. We need one or two volunteers to take minutes and also translators (the translators I can find easily but somebody to take useful minutes might be harder to find) – anybody interested?

Email to SQR volunteers 14th July 2008

We gave Leo 10,000 RMB to buy basic supplies for villages around Yingxiu. He was supposed to go there tomorrow but had to delay his trip due to heavy rainfall, as soon as he goes he’ll give us the receipts for the supplies he bought with our money and will also give me some pictures from his trip.

On Friday last week I went to Tumenzhen with Wenbo, Lydia and two filming guys from Shenzhen (George and Yimin). We delivered a whiteboard, toys and teaching material for several schools and then dropped off Lydia and Wenbo at two schools to stay there as volunteer teachers. Unfortunately Lydia twisted her ankle and so had to come back to Chengdu before she actually got to start classes. She is okay and back in Beijing now.

This Thursday I went to Qingchuan to bring the first couple of hundreds of our “back to school kits” (backpack filled with “good grief booklet”, pencil case, pen, pencil, eraser, pencil sharpener, two notebooks, candy and a small toy) and two foreign teachers (James and George) and one Chinese translator to the Huangpin Primary and Middle school. By the way those schoolkits are sponsored by a Belgian University who I’m in touch with, they generously donated for educational projects. The teachers were extremely grateful for our help and gave us a warm welcome (lots of baijiu included). James will stay in Qingchuan for 2 weeks George for 1. There were no roadblocks and the streets were in pretty good condition but one way takes about 5 hours (yes it was a long day).

On Saturday I brought an American doctor, his two kids and a Chinese counsellor and a box of toys up to one of the tent schools we are in touch with (in Tumenzhen- close to Mianzhu) to stay and teach there for at least one week maybe even two. We had to register at one of the local “tent offices” which unexpectedly only took 5 minutes, the whole trip went well. Wonderfully we didn’t have to pay any driver, since I talked to Leo about how expensive our driver to Qingchuan was and so he hooked us up with a very nice volunteer and his super comfy car, who brought us there for free (even insisted on paying the toll fee) and who made me promise to call him any time we need a free lift to the affected area (I already called him on this today- bet he didn’t expect to hear from me so soon).

Yesterday a volunteer teacher, called Saima, from Beichuan called me and I met with her and another teacher the same day. They are in charge of several tent schools in Beichuan and told me that the kids have literally nothing at the moment, they especially asked for books so I let them fill out the form that the library project gave me and I’m going to visit one of the schools on Monday (one day trip with the volunteer driver from Leo).  They also asked me for 250 back-to-school kits and possibly some toys (I’ll send another project proposal to the funding committee about that).

I’ve been emailing back and forth with Jenny and Tom from the library project and sent them infos about six schools that might be good locations for a library. They are very eager to get the project started so I hope to send you guys some news in the next week.

Lynda the author of “Good Grief” and Hong, her manager,have sent us almost 2000 copies of “Good Grief”, a booklet for kids that deals with the topic of how to cope with loss (translated into Chinese especially for the earthquake kids). I’ve been delivering those books to all the tent schools I’ve visited in the last week and also put one copy in each back-to-school kit. Lynda and Hong will be coming to Chengdu between July 25th and 27th.  I’ve already arranged a trip to Luoshui with the Rainbow Project for them and will probably also take them to one of “our” tentschools in Jiulong or Tumen.

The “back to school kits”, have been a big success so far and we’re going to buy some more for the school in Qingchuan and Beichuan.

Rebecca has been working tirelessly on getting in touch with all the NGOs so our first NGO Newsletter will hopefully be sent around soon. So, that’s pretty much all (not enough space for all info about the many other meetings we have had).

Summer teacher, food, medical supplies

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

The first longer-term Summer Camp teacher (Aaron) went up to Luoshui this morning armed with his tent, sleeping bag, some whiteboards and a heap of coloured markers.

Toby, He and Rainy went to Niubizi and Qunxin to deliver the oil and food supplies agreed yesterday. The disinfectants and basic medicines for Gingko village near Yingxiu were bought today. The chopper and the French doctors are ready and will be flying out in the morning.

Village near Yingxiu in need

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Another example of a funding request that also involves SQR’s longer-term aim of gathering information about local communities and their needs.

Request: A village near Yingxiu is in dire need of some Chinese medicines and some hygiene equipment. The area is still inaccessible by road but we’d be cooperating with a group of Chinese and French volunteers (some of whom are doctors) who can get in by helicopter and then hike. Supply streams have been badly affected by serious landslides. We’ve confirmed the need with local villagers. Former Heart to Heart people are helping by sending in some Western medicines too.