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Chinese President Hu Jintao and other Chinese Party and state leaders including Wu Bangguo, Wen Jiabao, Jia Qinglin, Li Changchun, Xi Jinping, Li Keqiang, He Guoqiang and Zhou Yongkang meet with representatives of the organizations and individuals who made major contributions to the relief work after the May 12 earthquake before the ceremony honoring organizations and individuals for their contributions to relief work after the May 12 earthquake struck southwest China, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, Oct. 8, 2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Oct. 8 (Xinhua) -- China held a ceremony
here on Wednesday to honor 522 individuals and 320 organizations for their
relief efforts after the May 12 earthquake struck the country's southwest.
At the ceremony, President Hu Jintao urged the
country to promote the anti-quake spirit in fighting ways to rebuild homes in
the quake-stricken areas.
Under the swift move of the government, army and
volunteers, more than 80,000 people were pulled out of the debris and more than
4.3 million were given timely treatment.
Among the honored was Jiang Min, a policewoman
renowned in China for her devotion to quake victims while 10 of her own
relatives, including her mother and two-year-old daughter, died in the
devastating quake.
"The honor should belong to the Chinese people. I'm
just an ordinary person after I return to my post, and I will do my duties as
others do," she said.
At present, the post-quake construction is being
carried out fervently in quake-stricken areas such as Sichuan, Shanxi and Gansu.
As the winter nears, whether people could get through the cold season safely,
when the millions of collapsed houses could be rebuilt, and whether the frequent
secondary disasters could be prevented are problems governments have to face.
Just before the Oct. 1 National Day, a rainstorm
struck most of the quake-hit areas in Sichuan Province. A flood and mudslides
left 16 dead and 48 missing, and tens of thousands of houses were shattered or
toppled.
Nearly 13,000 points with geological risks were
uncovered in the quake-hit areas, said Xu Shaoshi, the Land and Resources
Minister, on Tuesday.
Another challenge was sewage treatment.
"Although money is a big problem, the Environment
Protection Ministry is urging local governments to build a series of centralized
sewage treatment plants," said Ma Ning, director of the Southwest Environmental
Protection Supervision Center with the ministry.
How to live through the winter is the most urgent
task.
Shen Suhua, 45, a villager in Renhe Village, Shifang
City, one of the worst-hit areas in the quake, watched the TV broadcast of the
ceremony in her prefabricated house. Hu's words left her relieved.
Her original house was made of wooden blocks and
oilcloth. Small gaps were found all through the house.
"My clothing is still buried under the debris. The
donated clothes do not suit me. I have to wear a T-shirt in such cool weather,"
she said.
In Sichuan, about 1.82 million households are living
in prefab houses.
For 4.45 million families who lost their homes in the
quake, to move in a permanent house is their best wish. However, most could not
afford to build a house.
They were lucky the Sichuan government launched a
housing subsidy scheme on Tuesday to assist quake-affected urbanites during the
reconstruction.
Each urban family whose house was demolished in the
quake could receive a cash subsidy of 25,000 yuan (3,669 U.S. dollars) in
addition to other preferential policies. These included a tax reduction for
building new houses and lower prices for buying apartments, the provincial
government announced at a conference Tuesday.
People below the urban poverty line could live in a
40-square-meter apartment offered free by the government. Those who lost all
their family members could live in welfare homes with a 35,000 yuan government
subsidy.
The provincial government had made prefabricated
houses for 10 million people in three months following the quake. It plans to
reconstruct all the damaged houses by the end of 2010.
The country will spend three years to complete the
preliminary reconstruction and further develop the quake-hit region in the
following five years. Central finance has allocated 70 billion yuan to create a
reconstruction fund for the region this year.
Currently, workers from 20 provinces are helping the
reconstruction in quake-hit areas. Those provinces will put at least 1 percent
of their financial revenues every year into the reconstruction projects.
The magnitude-8.0 quake claimed more than 69,000
lives and left nearly 18,000 missing and more than 374,000 injured. It left
millions homeless in Sichuan and some neighboring regions.