It was raining again on Wednesday. Shen Lanxiang stood
in front of her wrecked house in Gantang Village of Chenzhou, in
central China's Hunan Province, and could not help
sobbing.
"Now it is impossible to find my wooden box," said
Shen, 62. The box, in which she kept her treasured belongings,
became wreckage buried with the rice and the clothes after Typhoon
Bilis came ashore on July 15 and brought the flood that roared
through her house.
The village couldn't even take the time to recover
from Bilis when Typhoon Kaemi, China's fifth of this year, assailed
east China's Fujian Province on Tuesday and stomped farther
inland, turning northwest and bringing Chenzhou the one thing its
people did not want to see more rain.
The local government evacuated villagers to safety, so
in one way, lives were saved. But when they were allowed to return
to their homes, what, really, did they have?
"All belongings were lost," said Shen, who was born in
Xinxing in south China's Guangdong Province, another of Bilis' victims.
"We will not be able to do any farming in the second half of the
year because of the continuing rain. I have never seen such a big
flood in my life."
It wasn't just the lost treasures that caused Shen to
be immersed in tears; she had also received relief goods from the
China Foundation for Poverty Alleviation (CFPA), a non-governmental
organization based in Beijing.
On Wednesday the CFPA launched a new relief project
for flood-stricken areas across the country. Each villager whose
house was destroyed received a bag of rice and clothes.
"Prior to the CFPA's project, I had also been given a
bottle of food oil and a bag of rice from the local charity
organization," she said.
Shen and her 68-year-old husband have moved into their
daughter's home.
"People are desperately in need of food and shelter,"
said Wang Xingzui, a CFPA official.
CFPA has donated 5 million yuan (US$625,000) worth of
goods to Hunan since the floods began. Shandong-based
Xinlang-Sinoer Co Ltd also donated clothes worth about 2.5 million
yuan (US$312,500) to the province on Wednesday.
Gantang, a mountainous village of 1,590 people, was
devastated by the typhoons and the floods they caused. Local
officials said 1,083 houses were destroyed, resulting in direct
losses estimated at nearly 5 million yuan (US$625,000), and up to
130 tons of food supplies and poultry in the village were
lost.
The rice paddies, their livelihood, also took a
beating: Of the 42 hectares of fields, 38.3 hectares (92 percent)
were destroyed, a loss estimated at 900,000 yuan
(US$112,500).
In Chenzhou, the area in Hunan worst hit by the floods
from Bilis, more than 3 million people - about 70 percent of the
population - were affected. Civil Affairs Department officials
there estimated more than 105,000 homes and 137,000 hectares of
farmland were destroyed. No estimates were available yet on how
much more damage Kaemi may cause.
"They have become homeless, and without food and
fields to farm, it's very hard for them to recover from the
disaster on their own," Wang said.
Since it was established in 1989, the CFPA said it has
distributed relief worth 1.5 billion yuan (US$187.5 million)
through more than 200 relief projects, benefiting more than 3
million people.
It started a separate urgency relief project in 2002,
which has raised more than 100 million yuan (US$12.5
million).
Besides the CFPA's assistance, Chenzhou had also
received about 8.9 million yuan (US$1.1 million) donations on
Wednesday through other charity organizations, said Li Qingxi,
director of the Chenzhou city government's poverty relief agency.
About 82 tons of rice and other daily necessities are also
arriving, he said.
What's more, the Asian Development Bank has granted a
US$200 million loan to the province to help with flood relief, the
Xinhua News Agency reported on Thursday.
According to Li Zhuqi, an official with the Chenzhou
city government, the city needs at least 500 million yuan (US$62.5
million) to help people recover.
"Relief work is hard, and we are calling for more help
from other cities and enterprises," Li Zhuqi said.
As the city is situated in the mountainous areas, it
lags behind coastal areas in terms of economic strength. Moreover,
more than 1,600 businesses have shut down, and a great number of
factories have been destroyed because of the storms.
Li Zhuqi said: "Enterprises and factories here would
like to help, but right now they can't do more than helping
themselves recover from the disaster."
The disasters are also an unfortunate lesson for local
governments in dealing with several aspects of serving their people
at the same time.
"We have to arrange people to move to safe places as
rains have continued these days, but at the same time, we are
working on how to help them recover," Li Zhuqi said.
The Chenzhou government is planning to allocate about
57.5 million yuan (US$7.2 million) to help people who lost their
homes to build new ones. And in the months ahead, it will raise and
appropriate 44.5 million yuan (US$5.6 million) to provide food for
residents in the flood-hit areas.
When Bilis struck Gantang, hundreds of people were
evacuated to a temporary shelter set up in a primary school,
according to Peng Shenggan, head of the village.
"But of course, it is not a long-term solution for
them to recover from the disaster," Peng said.
Ultimately, he added, the government can help the
victims only so far.
"Villagers will have to help each other after the
flood for better recovery," Peng said. "There have been some people
who live in other families' houses."
When a 92-year-old villager and his wife were forced
to live in a shelter that is only 5 square metres since their
houses and those of their relatives were all destroyed, neighbors
came to the rescue by helping the husband cook meals.
But as difficult as it is to get people victimized by
these two typhoons food and shelter, "the most difficult relief
work is to help villagers resume farming," Peng said.
"They used to be very busy in July; that's when they
prepare to harvest crops and get ready for the second farming
season of the year," he said. "But now they have nothing; they have
no fields to farm."
The local government has called for farmers to raise
more poultry after the flood. The hope is that, a year from now,
the victims who have no livelihood will have found a way to put
roofs over their heads and at least have something on the
tables.
That's also what Shen Lanxiang hopes. "We will start
raising a chicken or a calf, then have more," she said, "and
finally we will have our own farmland to get back to the
beginning."
(China Daily July 29,
2006)
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