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Premier back in quake area to inspect rebuilding
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A couple, Shi Guangwu and Zhang Zhengfang, told him that they received a subsidy of 23,000 yuan (3,333 U.S. dollars) from the government to build a new residence.

Under a provincial government policy issued in June, rural families who lost their homes will build new ones under government supervision. Each will receive about 20,000 yuan from the government.

"I am glad to see farmers in the quake area are busy rebuilding their homes with their own hands. As long as we carefully plan and organize the work, new houses will rise soon," said Wen, who expressed appreciation for their self-reliant attitude.

During the four-day trip beginning Sunday, Wen also visited an urban community in Qiaozhuang Town, Qingchuan. Permanent home rebuilding has not started in the urban area yet as the government is working on a subsidy policy for urban survivors.

He explained to the residents that work has to be done to evaluate the condition of damaged houses and develop a rehabilitation plan.

"As soon as a policy is formulated, rebuilding will start," he said.

 

Premier Wen Jiabao visits Qiang ethnic group village in Beichuan County, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Sept. 1, 2008. Wen inspected repair work and raised morale among residents over the past three days, during a visit to southwestern Sichuan Province nearly four months after the devastating May 12 earthquake. [Xinhua Photo]



Besides residential buildings, schools and hospitals are priorities in rehabilitation.

At a temporary hospital in Qingchuan, Wen promised patients that the new hospital would be built soon and medical facilities would be better than before the earthquake.

The Premier chatted with doctors and nurses from eastern Zhejiang Province who were there helping to serve local residents.

Wen thanked them for lending a hand to quake survivors.

On the morning after the earthquake, the country saw Wen standing on the rubble of the Xinjian primary school in Dujiangyan city, encouraging a trapped child through a crack. Wen returned to the school, which is in makeshift buildings, during this visit.

More than 240 students in the school were killed in the quake.

Standing in a classroom before the blackboard, he said to the students: "You are our country's future. I believe beautiful flowers will blossom over the debris of the earthquake."

Children presented handmade cards to Wen and invited him to take photos with them. The Premier presented flowers and bowed three times under the national flag on the campus to mark the victims.

Agriculture and industry were gradually recovering in the quake area.

 

Premier Wen Jiabao (L) shakes hands with workers while visiting a road repair site near the epicenter, Yingxiu, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Sept. 2, 2008. [Xinhua Photo]



At Yongquan Village in Deyang City, people were harvesting rice and planting potatoes. Wen went into the field, asking farmers about their crop yield. Told there was a bumper rice harvest despite the quake, he urged local officials to resume production as soon as possible where conditions allow.

At quake-devastated Dongfang Steam Turbine Co., Ltd. of Deyang, which Wen had visited twice previously, he was visibly happy to see production back at the pre-quake level.

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