A spokesperson from the Ministry of Commerce said
that 21.6 million yuan (US$2.6 million) in emergency aid has been
delivered so far to countries affected by the earthquake-triggered
tsunami on December 26.
According to Chong Quan, speaking in
Beijing yesterday, over half of the 500 million yuan (US$60.2
million) pledged for reconstruction work has also been used or
allocated.
The work funded ranged from
provision of rescue equipment, financial aid, medical and rescue
teams, DNA testing and inspection teams to holding the China-ASEAN
symposium on tsunami disaster relief, said the spokesperson.
The recipients have included
Indonesia, Sri Lanka, the Maldives, Thailand, Kenya, Somalia,
Malaysia, Myanmar and the Seychelles, as well as a foundation of
the Indian prime minister.
The government has also pledged to
help rebuild schools and houses, repair fishing ports and establish
an earthquake and tsunami monitoring and early-warning system,
Chong said.
In addition, US$5 million of the
US$20 million promised for multilateral assistance has been
delivered to UN agencies, and China is consulting with them on how
to best use the remaining money.
"The aid provided by the government
is the largest ever both in terms of scale and value," said
Chong.
"The Ministry of Commerce, as the
leading government branch delivering aid, has adopted measures to
ensure quality and quantity of provisions, especially food and
medicines," he added.
According to official figures, the
total sum of aid offered by both the government and people of China
topped 1 billion yuan (US$120.5 million) by January 21.
(Xinhua News Agency February 1,
2005)
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