Whether it's flooding in Ili of Xinjiang or hailstone in Jiangxi,
tents needed for the homeless and clothing for the destitute are
delivered at the earliest possible time.
The quick response to the emergency calls in the two places last
year shows the Chinese government can now react much faster to
natural disasters.
With the coordination of the Ministry of Civil Affairs, the State
Development Planning Commission, the People's Bank of China
and the ministries of finance, water resources, agriculture,
communications, public health and education have united to form a
powerful disaster relief force.
Their team-up constitutes the country's most dynamic "emergency
squad" whose task is to minimize the losses inflicted upon
victims.
In
March this year, the Chinese army formally added disaster relief
training to its set of compulsory courses.
To
strengthen the nation's capability to handle emergencies, various
disaster-relief schemes are being mapped out across the country,
especially in those regions vulnerable to natural calamities.
Zhang Xiaoning, an official with the Ministry of Civil Affairs in
charge of disaster relief, said, "Reacting quickly so that relief
materials can arrive at the disaster areas as fast as possible has
become increasingly important."
As
the national economy continues to grow, people face fewer
difficulties in rebuilding homes and restarting production, Zhang
said.
Their biggest obstacle is surviving the one or two days immediately
after the disaster when it is hard to find shelter and food, he
added.
Li
Baojun, another official with the ministry, said, "An improved
capability in dealing with emergencies and providing daily
necessities has a direct impact on social stability and economic
reconstruction in disaster areas."
To
ensure the assembled force to work in harmony and perform its best,
a nationwide information system on disasters has been set up.
According to Li, the system can give a real-time monitoring of the
country's natural calamities, produce a disaster report within 24
hours, recommend relief schemes and even make a detailed record of
the measures taken by local governments.
China has also established eight central government-administered
warehouses in Shenyang, Tianjin, Zhengzhou, Wuhan, Changsha,
Guangzhou, Chengdu and Xi'an to store disaster-relief materials,
along with a national donation network of 237 reception
stations.
"Although the storage of disaster-relief materials has increased
rapidly, the money spent on the improvement of China's capability
to handle disasters is only 10 percent of the country's total
relief fund. A lot more should be put in," Li said.
Because of its natural conditions, China is one of the most
vulnerable countries in the world to fall under every kind of
natural disaster, with the exception of volcano eruptions.
Statistics reveal that between 1994 and 2001, a total of 18.63
billion yuan (US$2.24 billion) was allocated by the central
government to meet the basic needs of victims of disasters, 72.7
million people were transferred or relocated and 100 million yuan
(US$12.05 million) of both individual property and state-owned
assets were rescued.
The latest reports from water resource departments warn that
continuous rainfall has exposed central China's Hunan Province,
where extra heavy flooding occurred in 1998, once again to a new
round of flooding.
In
Yueyang City alone, some 5,000 cadres, 23,000 members of the public
and 300 vehicles have been moved to the front-line to fight the
floods.
Will they succeed?
"We stand in combat readiness," Zhang said.
(People's Daily
May 21, 2002)