Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions 2008
Related: Premier Wen delivers gov't
work report
Special Report: China's war on snow havoc
By Xinhua writer Cheng Zhiliang
BEIJING, March 6 (Xinhua) -- Premier Wen Jiabao said on Wednesday the past
five years was a momentous period for China, as the country recorded rapid
economic and social development amid some major disasters including SARS
outbreak, fatal typhoons, floods and recent snow and ice storms.
China suffered great life and economic losses from the above mentioned
disasters. However, it was rewarded on the other hand.
Snow and ice storms plagued eastern and southern China since mid-January,
leading to widespread traffic jams, structural collapses, blackouts and crop
losses in 19 provincial regions, leaving 129 people dead and causing 151.65
billion yuan (21.3 billion U.S. dollars) of losses. It was the worst snow
disaster for the country over the past five decades.
However, China stepped out of the disaster in a short time, with the
Ministry of Civil Affairs declaring southern provinces were "in stable
condition" on Feb. 28.
The Chinese leadership has drawn lessons from the snow and ice storm. "We
will learn from this large-scale natural disaster," Premier Wen on Wednesday
told nearly 3,000 lawmakers from across the country at the annual session of the
11th National People's Congress (NPC), the top legislature.
Wen vowed to accelerate the development of infrastructure, including
electricity, transportation and telecommunications, to improve the capacity to
resist disasters and maintain normal operations.
While joining NPC deputies from the eastern province of Jiangsu in group
discussion on Wednesday, Chinese President Hu Jintao said, "The more advanced
our society and economy, the more we have to be prepared for and be on guard
against such risks," he said.
Actually, it is no wonder for China to end a catastrophe promptly. State
Council, the Cabinet, established a headquarters to coordinate contingency
measures for coal, oil and power supply, transportation and disaster relief in
snow-hit areas, which effectively put resources from all over the country to
combat the crisis.
The Chinese people joined in hands at a time of hardship. Northern
provinces, where snow storm are not rare, dispatched thousands of electricians
to the southern regions to help restore the damaged power grid. Some farmer
volunteers from Hebei Province traveled a long distance to Hubei, one of the
worst hit provinces, and contributed their part to the country's struggle.
The disaster-resisting practices derived from the experiences in dealing
with frequent disasters since 2003 when Hu Jintao was elected state president
and Wen Jiabao acted as premier. Soon after that, a severe SARS outbreak hit the
country hard.
The combat against SARS raised the people's awareness of the importance of
strengthening public health system.
China invested heavily, or 629.4 billion yuan of government expenditure, in
health care in the past five years, up 127 percent from the previous equivalent
period. The funding was mainly used to develop public health and medical
services, and basically complete the formation of the disease prevention and
control system and emergency medical response system.
The number of diseases covered by the state plan for immunization and
disease prevention was increased from 7 to 15, and AIDS, tuberculosis,
schistosomiasis and other major communicable diseases are treated free of
charge.
During the past five years, infant and maternal mortality rates dropped
significantly, while average life expectancy reached 73 years in 2005. They are
momentous achievements for China, a developing country with a population of 1.3
billion.
China was hit by typhoons in 2006 with heavy losses of lives and property.
A year later, strong typhoons attacked again in summer, but caused much lower
losses with enhanced early-warning systems in place.
The NPC National Committee last August adopted an emergency response law
aiming at improving the country's ability to handle frequent industrial
accidents, natural disasters, health and public security hazards.
The law would help effectively minimize losses and prevent minor mishaps
from turning into major public crisis, lawmakers said.
The introduction of new technology is also beneficial in the fighting
against the disasters. Mobile phone text messages were widely used to warn those
in danger.
When the SARS outbreak was quenched in 2003, Premier Wen Jiabao said that
the nation would definitely recover its losses from the crisis as it continued
to make progress.
"The most important point is to learn from past experiences and lessons,"
Wen said.