China has transferred 687.63
million yuan of donations to tsunami-hit countries in the Indian
Ocean, carrying out its pledge in full, Chinese foreign ministry
spokesman Qin Gang said on Tuesday.
"All Chinese donations to the countries stricken by
the Indian Ocean tsunami have been made, with most construction
projects now complete and projects still under construction
proceeding smoothly," Qin said, responding to a question about the
Chinese government donations.
The Chinese government and people extend deep sympathy
and condolence to disaster-hit countries and peoples for their
great loss, Qin said, noting that this is the biggest emergency
relief package that China has provided since the people's republic
was founded in 1949.
The catastrophic tsunami that occurred in the Indian
Ocean on Dec. 26, 2004 left 37,000 people missing and caused US$4.5
billion of property losses.
The very next day, the Chinese government announced
that it would provide 21.63 million yuan worth of emergency
humanitarian relief in kind and cash. Later it added disaster
assistance of 500 million yuan and multilateral donations of about
166 million yuan.
The Chinese government and people's actions were an
embodiment of its good-neighborly policy of "forging friendship and
partnership with neighbors" and were highly appreciated by
governments and people from the tsunami-hit countries as well as
the international community, the spokesman said.
"We will continue to work with other countries on the
projects still under construction to help the victim countries
recover from the disaster," Qin added.
(Xinhua News Agency December 27, 2006)
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