Home > About China
China's Hu says quake relief government's top priority(05/13/08)

 
·President Hu urged gov'ts at all levels to regard earthquake rescue and relief as top priority.
·The army and medical personnel are urged to go to the quake-hit areas as soon as possible.
·Meeting demanded sufficient supply of food, medicine, clothes and tents to quake-hit areas.

Special report: Strong Earthquake Jolts SW China

    BEIJING, May 13 (Xinhua) -- Chinese leader Hu Jintao urged governments at all levels to regard earthquake rescue and relief as the top priority at a high profile meeting late Monday evening.

    Hu, state President and General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC), presided over the meeting of the Political Bureau Standing Committee of the Central Committee of the CPC. The meeting called on the army, armed police and paramilitary forces, as well as medical personnel to go to the quake-hit areas as soon as possible, and mount all-out efforts to save the injured and reduce the impact caused by the havoc.

    Monday's quake measuring 7.8 on the Richter scale jolted Wenchuan County, Sichuan Province in southwest China at 2:28 p.m., resulting in nearly 9,000 deaths reported so far. Tremors were also reported in over half of China's provinces and municipalities, according to the China Seismological Bureau.

    The meeting demanded sufficient supply of food, medicine, clothes and tents to the quake-hit areas and that telecommunication, power and water supplies and transportation access must be restored as soon as possible.

    Local governments should keep a close watch on the latest development of the earthquake and its aftershocks, and guard against earthquake-induced disasters causing new casualties.

    Those who spread rumors to sabotage disaster relief work would be dealt with according to China's laws and regulations.

    The meeting decided to set up a disaster relief headquarters with Premier Wen Jiabao as head, and Li Keqiang and Hui Liangyu, both vice premiers, as deputy heads.

    The meeting called on all party members in the quake-hit areas to devote themselves to protect the interests of the public on the front line of disaster relief work.

Premier Wen pledges to save more lives when inspecting quake-hit hospital, school

Chinese Pemier Wen Jiabao (2nd R) speaks to buried people at a ruined hospital in Dujiangyan city of southwest China's Sichuan Province May 12, 2008. Premier Wen flew into southwest China's Sichuan Province on Monday.(Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>

    BEIJING, May 13 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has pledged to save as many lives as the rescue teams can in southwest China's Sichuan Province which was hit by a major quake on Monday afternoon.

    Wen made the remarks during his inspections at a hospital and a school in Dujiangyan, a city northwest of the provincial capital Chengdu, partly damaged by the quake measuring 7.8 on the Richter scale. Full story

Premier Wen appeals for "calm, confidence, efficiency" after quake

Member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and Chinese Pemier Wen Jiabao (C) arranges relief work of the earthquake during his flight for the disaster area on May 12, 2008. Premier Wen flew into southwest China's Sichuan Province on Monday afternoon and left straight for the quake-hit county of Wenchuan, 159 kilometers from the provincial capital of Chengdu, to oversee rescue work there.(Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>

    BEIJING, May 12 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has asked for public calm and efficient organization of disaster relief work after a major quake hit southwest China's Sichuan Province on Monday.

    Wen has arrived at Dujiangyan, a city northwest of the provincial capital Chengdu, and started to oversee disaster relief work. The city was less than 100 kilometers from the quake's epicenter at Wenchuan County. Full story

Chinese disaster relief troops approaching earthquake epicenter on foot

    BEIJING, May 13 (Xinhua) -- Relief troops are approaching Wenchuan County on foot, the epicenter of a quake that jolted southwest China's Sichuan Province Monday afternoon.

    The authority has not given a specific number of the rescuing troops approaching the epicenter, but about 100 officers of the armed police forces advancing to Wenchuan on foot has been accessed via satellite phone. Full story

Editor: Mu Xuequan
 


[Suggest to a Friend]
       [Print]