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Harsh winter storms kill 107 people
BEIJING—Disasters caused by
prolonged low temperatures, icy rain and heavy snow in the southern part
of China in the past month killed 107 people and left eight others
missing as of Tuesday, Civil Affairs Minister Li Xueju said here on
Wednesday.
Direct economic loss was estimated at 111.1 billion yuan (about15.3
billion U.S. dollars), he added at a national video conference on
disaster relief. Altogether, 21 provincial-level areas have been
affected. About1.5 million people have been evacuated, and 1.93 million
stranded passengers have been transported out. The extreme weather
affected nearly 24.4 million hectares of farmland and led to the
collapse of about 354,000 houses.
Seven provinces — Hunan, Guizhou, Jiangxi, Anhui, Hubei, Zhejiang and
Sichuan — and the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region were the worst-hit
areas. The snow snarl, the worst in five decades, and even in a century
in a few areas, caused death, structural collapse, blackouts, accidents,
transport problems and livestock and crop loss in the country’s eastern,
central and southern regions for about a month.
As power supplies, coal reserves and traffic were getting back to
normal, and prices remain relatively stable in disaster-hit areas, Li
warned “the current disaster-relief work is still at a crucial stage,”
and “the hardest time has far from gone by”. As the temperature rises,
disasters induced by thawing snow and ice, such as geological disasters
and environmental pollution, might occur, which might further aggregate
losses, he said.
In some remote and mountainous areas, including Hubei, Jiangxi and
Guizhou, electricity supply, traffic and telecom in many villages have
not been restored. Some people were still suffering from water supply
difficulties and living necessity shortages, Li said. Despite grain
storage, many households were without rice due to a lack of electricity
to run their grinding machines.
Li said the ministry would intensify its disaster relief work to deal
with the impact of the harsh weather and accelerate the rebuilding of
destroyed houses and do more to organize the donation of winter clothes
and quilts. “The rebuilding of collapsed houses should be completed by
the end of June,” Li said. The ministries of civil affairs and finance
have allocated a total of 535 million yuan (73.79 million U.S. dollars)
in emergency funding to 19 provincial-level regions affected by the
disaster.
The two ministries have so far earmarked another 710 million yuan for
needy urban and rural residents in seven of the worst-hit provinces and
regions as temporary subsidies, Li said. The ministry has helped procure
1.99 million cotton-padded coats and quilts for the disaster-hit areas.
In joint efforts with the armed forces, it has utilized nine helicopters
to air-drop 43 tons of relief supplies to the southwest Sichuan Province
and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
By Tuesday, Chinese citizens had donated about 1.2 billion yuan(165.5
million U.S. dollars) in cash and relief supplies to the
disaster-stricken areas, according to Li. Seven worst-hit provinces and
regions, including Hunan Province, have received donations worth 893
million yuan. Chinese President Hu Jintao has ordered all of the
country’s military forces to continue to support the reconstruction work
in disaster-hit areas. By Feb. 11, China’s troops had sent 6.43 million
soldiers and officers and 18.69 million militia to help reconstruction.
At Wednesday’s executive meeting presided over by Premier Wen Jiabao,
the State Council, China’s cabinet, warned local governments and
departments concerned not to relax themselves in disaster relief,
demanding them to organize manpower, materials and funds in a scientific
way and make plans, arrangements and start-ups quickly.—Xinhua |