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 Relief clerks
distribute food to Tsunami survivors at a remote village in south India's
Tamil Nadu State Jan. 4, 2005. The Indian central government has announced
an immediate allocation of 5 billion rupees (116 million US dollars) for
the National Calamity Contingency Fund towards relief and rehabilitation
in the affected states. (Xinhua Photo/An
Zhiping)
| BEIJING, Jan. 6 (Xinhuanet) -- International aid for tsunami-hit regions
continued to pour in Wednesday as more countries sent relief goods or made
donation calls.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said Wednesday that China will increase its aid
and Chinese non-governmental organizations and citizens have been mobilized to
donate.
He made the pledge in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta where he is
attending a special summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations along
with about 20 heads of state and representatives of international organizations
on Thursday.
Wen's special plane also carried China's third batch of humanitarian aid to
Indonesia.
UN humanitarian chief Jan Egeland told reporters Wednesday that global donations
for tsunami-hit countries have surged to nearly 4 billion dollars.
He thanked the around 50 countries and financial institutions for their
contributions and called on them to maintain their commitment to survivors in a
longer term.
The International Monetary Fund will provide an aid of up to 1 billion
dollars for tsunami-hit Asia, said its director general Rodrigo Rato in a
statement on Wednesday.
The Arab League has opened an account for Arab individuals and
organizations to offer donations for tsunami-hit countries, Egypt's official
MENA news agency reported on Wednesday.
Amr Moussa, secretary-general of the pan-Arab organization, said in a
statement that the donations will be transferred to the accounts of the Asian
countries.
Some Arab countries, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab
Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar and Egypt, have already sent emergency aid to the
affected countries, he said.
The Albanian Council of Ministers decided Wednesday to provide an aid of
500,000 dollars, the ATA news agency reported.
Australia will provide 1 billion Australian dollars (about 764 million
dollars) to aid Indonesia, Australian Prime Minister John Howard told reporters
on Wednesday.
This was the biggest single aid package in Australia's history,and half of the
assistance will be in the form of grants for short term relief and the
remainder in loans for long term reconstruction, Howard said.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair told BBC radio on Wednesday that his
government might increase its aid to several hundred million pounds, but added
that his government will wait and see what is required.
He also said Britain backs the proposal on debt relief to hardest-hit
nations.
Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin congratulated individual Canadians
Wednesday for donating more than 70 million Canadian dollars (58 million
dollars) for tsunami relief efforts.
At a press conference in Montreal, Martin said the Canadian government's
contribution could be "much greater" than the 80 million Canadian dollars (66
million dollars) already pledged.
Martin also said his government will consider ways of increasing
immigration from tsunami-hit regions.
The government of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea on Wednesday
offered an emergency aid of 150,000 dollars to tsunami-hit South Asia, reported
the official Korean Central News Agency.
Germany is to increase its relief aid to 500 million euros (664million dollars),
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder told a press conference on
Wednesday.
The figure makes Germany the largest donor country ahead of Japan and the
United States.
Malaysia has agreed to allow donor countries such as the United States,
Britain, Australia and Japan to use its airspace and airports as transit bases
to send humanitarian aid to Acheh, Indonesia, Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister
Najib Tun Razak told local reporters Wednesday.
Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday pledged to send more aid to
Sri Lanka and Thailand, the Kremlin press service said.
Also on Wednesday, a plane carrying about 20 tons of humanitarian aid left
Russia for Indonesia, the Itar-Tass news agency reported.
Zimbabwe also pledged aid to Indonesia.
An earthquake, measuring 8.7 on the Richter scale, hit at 06:58a.m. local
time (0058 GMT) on Dec. 26 off the Indonesian island ofSumatra.
It was followed by a tsunami that swept across the coastal countries of the
Indian Ocean rim, wiping off villages and killing about 150,000 people. It
is estimated that more than 1.8 million people in the tsunami-hit regions need
food aid and 5 million others have been made homeless.
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