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HK’s hearts reach out to Sichuan
As
a Hong Kong person living on the mainland, I felt particularly proud
that my hometown has mounted what the local media described as a
“massive” campaign to raise money and help for the relief of the victims
of the earthquake in Sichuan province.
Within days after the earthquake, Hong Kong raised a total of more than
HK$600 million, including HK$300 million from the government, and the
remaining portion from businesses and private citizens. A fund raiser
reported that at one collection point in Causeway Bay, one of Hong
Kong’s busiest commercial districts, passersby donated about HK$70,000
in cash within three hours.
Hong Kong people have been well-known for their generosity when called
upon to donate money to help victims of natural disasters. But this is
the first time that so large an amount was given with so much compassion
toward relief work outside the city’s boundaries.
I was not in Hong Kong to share the emotion of my fellow citizens as
they watched the tragedy unfolding on television every evening. But many
friends had called me simply to share their grief and express their
sympathy toward the many thousands of people living in the area
devastated by the quake.
Sichuan may seem far away to many people in Hong Kong. But we could feel
the pain and rejoice in the triumph as we watched a young girl rescued
from under a pile of rubble. Even if all our donations were spent on
saving that one life, I believe that it would have been worth it, and I
am sure that many of my fellow citizens think the same.
We should bear in mind that Hong Kong owes its prosperity, at least
partly, to the economic development on the mainland. Economic reform on
the mainland in the past 30 years has provided Hong Kong entrepreneurs
with unprecedented opportunities, that have helped catapult the city
from a low-cost manufacturing base to an international financial center.
A part of the wealth that has raised our living standard to among the
highest in the world was created by the millions of migrant workers in
Hong Kong-owned factories in the Pearl River Delta region. Many of those
workers come from Sichuan and some of them may well have come from the
quake-stricken region.
We feel that we have a responsibility beyond humanitarian concern to
offer help to victims of the earthquake. In fact, HK$600 million isn’t
all that big an amount. There is a need for an on-going campaign to
raise fund to help finance the reconstruction of the devastated region.
This is going to be a monumental task costing billions of yuan. The
upturned roads, broken bridges and twisted railway tracks are in urgent
need to be repaired or replaced. Collapsed schools and hospitals have to
be rebuilt and massive financial assistance must be offered to people to
rebuild homes and start a new life.
Many Hong Kong millionaires are known to have donated large sums of
money to building schools and hospitals bearing their names in various
cities and townships on the mainland. I am sure they will consider it a
worthy cause to contribute to the building of new schools and hospitals
in the earthquake-stricken region.
I think we share the same wish to not only rebuild that region but to
build it better than before. That’s the least we can do to those who
perished in the quake.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |