|
GUANGZHOU, April 25 (Xinhua) -- After a six-hour
flight and nearly four-hours on a bumpy bus, Ma Peizhu finally saw her parents'
grey-brick house on the outskirt of Taishan, a southern Chinese city and the
ancestral home of generations of overseas Chinese.
"Thank God I am home." said Ma who burst into tears
as she hugged her parents tightly. Her two-year-old daughter, understanding
little of what was happening, turned on a beaming smile for grandparents.
Ma and the other four members of her family were
among the hundreds of Chinese who have returned home from the Solomon Islands
after escaping recent riots there.
ĦĦĦĦTHE JOURNEY HOME
At half past midnight on Tuesday morning, 310
overseas Chinese including 21 Hong Kong citizens arrived in Guangzhou City in
South China's Guangdong Province after being air-lifted from Solomon Islands.
Outside the airport, local officials from the nearby
cities of Jiangmen, Kaiping, Enping, Taishan waited for hours with idling buses
to pick them up.
At 3:00 a.m., a coach carrying 45 weary Chinese from
the Solomon Islands heads to Taishan. Most of them fell asleep shortly after the
bus departs.
Three hours later, they were received with warm hugs
and foods.
Twenty-year-old Feng Youyu looked terrified recalling
the nightmare experience.
"Local people broke in as I rushed out from the
shop's back door. They took away everything they could and smashed the things
that were too heavy to move," said Feng, who went to the Pacific country for two
months.
"I'm so relieved he's finally home. I was so worried
I stayed in front of TV all day long following the situation," Feng's father
said.
Over 1,000 Chinese nationals or people of Chinese
origin lived in the Solomon Islands before violence erupted in the country's
capital Honiara and local rioters looted the city's Chinatown.
Lu Xiongwei, an official with the Guangdong
Provincial office for overseas Chinese affairs, said most of the returned
Chinese were from his province and many had worked in the Solomon Islands for
ten to twenty years.
"Most of them have families or relatives in
Guangdong. Our top task is to help them back home," he said.
A NARROW ESCAPE
As home province of many of the overseas Chinese, Lu
said Guangdong learned about the unrest in the Solomon Islands on April 19, one
day after the violence broke out. The province immediately reported the
information to the Central Government.
Since China and the Solomon Islands have no
diplomatic ties, the Chinese Foreign Ministry made urgent contact with the
governments of Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea, asking them to
provide assistance to Chinese citizens if required.
Meanwhile, the ministry also ordered the Chinese
Embassy in Papua New Guinea to immediately dispatch diplomats to the Solomon
Islands to contact local Chinese people.
"I was born and grew up in the Solomon Islands and
had good relations with local people. I had never imagined that I would be
looted," said Li Qingji, a man with Hong Kong citizenship.
Li said he and his wife woke up at night when local
people broke into the hotel where they were staying. Finding nowhere to hide
they ran toward the sea shore, where they found a boat and stayed on board the
entire night.
"Watching towering fires from the boat, fleeing the
place was the only thing I had in mind," he said.
With the help of the Chinese Embassy in Papua New
Guinea, most of the Chinese in the Solomon Islands managed to find safety in the
local police headquarters. Most then left for Papua New Guineaon charter flights
rented by the Chinese government.
On Monday, China sent chartered planes to bring the
Chinese home from Papua New Guinea.
"This is the first time I have come back to the
homeland. I never expected I would return under such circumstances," Li said
bitterly.
With the arrival of the second group of 310 overseas
Chinese evacuees from the Solomon Islands early Tuesday morning, China announced
that it had completed its rescue of overseas Chinese from Solomon Islands.
A total of 325 Chinese people were brought back home
safe and sound.
"It was fortunate that we had no casualties in the
disaster considering all the property damage," Ma Zhongming, whose two shops
were set ablaze by the rioters. He estimates his losses to be 2.5 million yuan
(312,000 US dollars).
"The government's quick response helped us survive
the disaster," he said.
Ma said he felt the rescue work had been conducted
quite orderly.
"Old people, children and women left first. There was
no disagreement with such arrangements. We all believed that the Chinese
government must have ways to help us out."
A special work group, consisting of officials from
the Foreign Ministry, the Ministry of Public Security, the Office of Overseas
Chinese Affairs of the State Council, and the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office
of the State Council, remains in Guangzhou helping with the resettlement
mission. Enditem |