Save the Children, an international
charity organization for children's welfare, has allocated 700,000
yuan (US$87,500) of emergency funds to help children in the snow
disaster-stricken areas of Altay Prefecture in northwest China's
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, said a charity official in
Beijing yesterday.
With the support of local civil
affairs authorities, Save the Children responded in mid-January to
the Altay snow disaster with an initial allocation of 100,000 yuan
(US$12,500) emergency fund for children' winter clothing, bedding
and coal for heating, herding yurts and houses.
Altay was hit by heavy snowstorms in
early January and thousands of people were trapped.
To help children stay away from
cold-related illness and injuries, including respiratory illness
and frostbite, the organization has distributed 1,300 sets of
winter clothing to the most vulnerable children. In addition, 1,300
bedding sets and 250 tons of coal are being distributed to an
estimated 500 poor families.
"Although these children are poor,
they are really smart and hardworking. If they get our help their
future will be brighter," said Aytuna Hisamudin, the organization's
staff person.
During Spring Festival, Save the
Children also distributed relief items consisting of children's
winter clothes, coal and corn to feed the animal herds that are the
main livelihood for families in the area.
In Qing He and Fu Yun counties, the
two most recently affected areas in Altay, many Kazak herders
urgently need heating fuel and animal feed.
According to the information from
Qing He's civil affairs bureau, herders in remote pasturing areas
are in urgent need of animal feed as the herds of animals fight to
dig through the deep snow for food. As a result, thousands of
animals have died or are a risk of death from leg injuries.
To date, over 270 tons of corn are
being distributed by Save the Children to the county's animal
husbandry office, herding stations and then to affected herding
families in remote pasturing locations.
Officials with Save the Children
said the organization will work with local civil affairs
authorities to continue monitoring the situation and investigating
how to further protect children and families.
Set up in 1919, Save the Children
has established programs in over 60 developing countries to work
for children's welfare.
(Xinhua News Agency February 11,
2006)
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