HONG
KONG, April 25 (Xinhua) -- Thirty-seven Hong Kong residents and their relatives
who were evacuated from riot-torn Solomon Islands arrived in Hong Kong from
Guangzhou Tuesday afternoon.
They were warmly received by officials from the Hong
Kong Immigration Department, Social Welfare Department and Home Affairs
Department.
Altogether 310 overseas Chinese, including 39 Hong
Kong residents and their relatives, evacuated from Solomon Islands arrived in
Guangzhou City in South China's Guangdong Province at 00:29 Tuesday morning.
Assistant Director of Hong Kong Immigration
Department, Chiu Wai-kai, told reporters at the Lok Ma Chau control point
Tuesday that there are two Hong Kong residents who plan to come back to Hong
Kong by themselves.
Of the rest 37 evacuees, 17 are Hong Kong permanent
identity card holders. 18 of the 20 relatives hold Solomon Islands passports.
The Hong Kong Immigration Department will keep close
touch with the Office of the Commissioner of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
the People's Republic of China in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region,
and arrange for the returning journey if any of the 37 evacuees plan to go back
to Solomon Islands, Chiu said.
He said the Hong Kong Home Affairs Department will
provide an emergency assistance of 8000 Hong Kong dollars (about 1032 U.S.
dollars) at most to each family.
During the recent unrest in the Solomon Islands'
capital Honiara, dozens of residences and shops in the city's Chinatown were
looted and set on fire. Hundreds of local Chinese residents were forced to flee
their homes.
Informed about the unrest, Chinese leaders were
greatly concerned over the safety and property security of the overseas Chinese
there.
The central government chartered foreign commercial
airplanes to evacuate them to Port Moresby, capital of Papua New Guinea first,
and then sent a chartered plane of China Southern Airlines there to carry them
back to Guangzhou. Enditem