Helping the victims of the Chinese earthquake
20 June 2008
On 12 May, Sichuan province in the south west of China was hit by the worst
earthquake that the country has seen in decades. The epicentre was in Wenchuan
county. It is estimated that around 90,000 people were killed or are missing,
and that 10 million have lost their homes, with a further 30 million suffering
dislocation of some kind. Read more here: One month on from the China earthquake.
The UK Government has provided over £2 million towards the relief effort. This
includes a £1 million cash contribution to local non-governmental organisations
working on the ground (through the China Association for NGO Cooperation’s
emergency appeal). This money was spent on water, food, shelter and medicines,
plus 2,400 locally purchased tents. An additional £1.2 million-worth of material
assistance was provided in response to Chinese requests. The photos below show
how the relief effort got underway.
 |
 |
| In addition to 2,400 tents bought locally, DFID
sent over 5,000 cold weather tents and nine satellite phones.
They were flown into Chengdu (90 km from the earthquake epicentre)
from 22-31 May, and distributed very speedily to the affected
areas.
|
DFID China visited Pan Long village, 30 km from Chengdu and
50 km from the earthquake epicentre, after DFID’s supply of tents
arrived. Before that, locals had been living in very flimsy self-made
accommodation for days. |
| |
|
 |
 |
| The villagers of Pan Long collect the tents
sent by DFID. Some 1,230 people in the village were affected by the
earthquake, and not a single house, out of the 338 households in the
village, survived. Luckily, the human toll was
relatively low, since most of the villagers were working in the field
when disaster struck. Soldiers from the Chinese army reached the
scene two hours after the disaster and helped local
people to erect temporary shelters. They also distributed food and water
to those most in need. |
Over 5,000 tents flown from the UK were enough to shelter
30,000 people. The Chinese army and the locals worked together to erect
the tents - 257 were supplied to 338 households in the village. Some
families will have to share tents for a short time. |
| |
|
 |
 |
| A young woman in front of her destroyed house
in Cifeng Town, where 80% of houses were reduced to rubble and 20,000
people have become homeless. In Beichuan county, next to the
earthquake’s epicentre, possibly 80% of all buildings collapsed,
including eight schools, one hospital and two chemicals factories.
Officials estimate that the rebuilding work will take at least three years. |
DFID is continuing to help people affected by the disaster.
Through the International Labour Organisation, we have provided a
further £350,000 to train local entrepreneurs in starting their own
businesses. This is based on a very successful earlier cooperation with
China, which saw training rolled out across 114 cities. It is expected
that at least 1,000 businesses destroyed by the earthquake will be
re-established in the next 12 months, and a further 700 will be set
up from scratch. |
| |
|
Back
to top
Links
|