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BEIJING, May 23 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has called on authorities to ensure earthquake survivors in Qinghai Province receive adequate food and financial assistance to maintain their livelihoods. Rebuilding projects should be finished within three years, with a priority on residential buildings and public facilities such as schools and hospitals, Wen said.Wen made the call in a speech, which was published Sunday by the State Council General Office, at a meeting to discuss relief work on May 1 during his second visit to the quake zone in Yushu prefecture.Wen said supplies of food, cooking oil, vegetables, fuel and relief allowances should be provided to ensure living standards, and schools should resume as soon as possible in tents or temporary buildings.Debris should be cleared quickly, and the disposal of garbage, human waste and livestock carcases must be properly carried out, Wen said.Adequate disinfectant chemicals and equipment should be prepared, and authorities should be alert for outbreaks of disease, Wen said.Damaged roads and bridges should be repaired and airport operations should be guaranteed to maintain efficient transport. Water and power supplies should also be restored rapidly, Wen said.Agricultural production should be restored, and the government must help farmers buy seed and fertilizers. Markets should be rebuilt and goods supplies and prices stabilized, Wen said.Psychological assistance should be provided to people suffering from trauma problems.Reconstruction planning should be scientifically evaluated on the basis of the surveys of the area's geological, hydrological and ecological conditions, and reconstruction sites should avoid earthquake fault lines, Wen said.He urged authorities to take into consideration the environment, economic and social development, poverty alleviation and livelihood promotion in the reconstruction.The work should also be carried out with concern for the prefecture's distinctive ethnic characteristics and geological conditions.Wen stressed in particular the protection of Tibetan culture during reconstruction work, and he promised the government would support the repair of damaged temples and protect key cultural relics.Because Yushu's ecosystem is fragile and sensitive to human activities, rebuilding work must be environmentally friendly, with a high recycling rate of building materials, he said.The reconstruction fund would be provided by the central government and supported by public donations. Favorable taxation, employment, finance and land use policies would also be enacted, Wen said.The premier praised ethnic and religious groups who had played important role in relief work. He said efforts should be intensified to maintain ethnic unity and avoid disputes.He also urged local authorities to care for the relief workers, and guarantee their basic working and living conditions.Wen first visited Yushu on April 15, the day after the 7.1-magnitude earthquake, which killed at least 2,200 people and left more than 100,000 homeless.
BEIJING, May 17 (Xinhua) -- China hopes the United States will not exclude China when it loosens its export restrictions, Yao Jian, a spokesman with the Ministry of Commerce said here Monday.Yao's remarks came after the United States said over the weekend it might change its exports control regime.The United States should treat all countries equally and not discriminate against China in its export policies, Yao said at a press conference.U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke said in Hong Kong Sunday "concrete proposals" for changes in the exports control could be expected within the next several months.Locke said the review will help with "the sale of highly sophisticated technology that might be embedded in some of the machines and devices like wind turbines, and the software that might operate these very sophisticated systems."

NARA, Japan, April 19 (Xinhua) -- Former Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan said Monday that China, Japan and South Korea are " mutually complementary in economy and closely linked in trade.""The considerable disparity in their resources, technological levels and labor costs highlights enterprises' comparative advantages and is conducive to transnational investments and trade, " said Zeng in his keynote speech at the fifth session of the Northeast Asia Trilateral Forum."Japan and South Korea are more advanced than China in economic development, and have accumulated much experience in achieving economic transformation, dealing with the relation of development and environment and tackling international trade frictions, from which China could draw lessons and benefit," he said at the one- day forum taking place in the ancient Japanese city of Nara.There thus exists great potential as well as a broad prospect for their future practical cooperation among the three nations, said Zeng.The three need to continuously substantialize the content of their partnership, infuse new elements in their cooperation and improve their communication and coordination from trilateral, regional and global aspect, he said.In his keynote speech, former Japanese Prime Minister Nakasone Yasuhiro said that Japan, China and South Korea should further prompt their cooperation and make their voice more clearly heard on the world stage in a bid to safeguard the stability of Asia as well as that of the world at large.The three need to set as their long-term aim the establishment of a regional cooperative mechanism in areas of East Asia's politics and security, economy and culture, and jointly play a leading role to that end.Former South Korean Prime Minister Lee Hong-koo, for his part, said that faced with problems such as the security and stability of global financial markets, trade liberalization, climate change and the proliferation of nuclear weapons, it draws worldwide attention how the three nations coordinate with each other to adopt a unanimous stance.Zeng arrived here Saturday to attend the fifth session of the Northeast Asia Trilateral Forum that opened earlier Monday.The trilateral gathering drew 29 former high-ranking officials and prominent figures from political, academic and business circles of China, Japan and South Korea.The forum, cosponsored by China's Xinhua News Agency, Japan's Nikkei news group and South Korea's leading daily newspaper JoongAng Ilbo, aims to strengthen non-governmental exchanges among the three nations.The yearly event has been held alternately in the three countries since 2006.
BEIJING, April 1 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Hui Liangyu Thursday urged authorities to make provision of drinking water for people in drought-hit southwest China a top priority.Hui's call followed arrangements for combating the expanding drought laid out at a State Council, or Cabinet, meeting in Beijing."As the drought in southwest China continues, our fight against the disaster and the relief work remain onerous," he said."We must do everything we can to get water by taking measures such as artificial precipitation, digging wells and finding new water sources," he said.He also asked officials to invest more in building water conservancy facilities to solve the "bottleneck problems" of agricultural production.As of Tuesday, the expanding severe drought had left 24.25 million people and 15.84 million farm animals short of water, Vice Minister of Water Resources Liu Ning said Wednesday.The drought started in September last year in southwest China, with Yunnan Province being the worst affected region. Ocassional rainfall in these areas has done little to alleviate it.
BEIJING, April 18 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu Jintao on Sunday promised orphan students in the quake-hit Yushu new homes and schools while rescuers continue to battle altitude sickness in search of survivors."There will be new homes! There will be new schools!" the president, who arrived in Yushu to inspect relief work one day after returning from a shortened overseas visit, wrote in chalk on the blackboard of a makeshift classroom.The 7.1-magnitude quake which struck the Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Yushu Wednesday morning has left at least 1,706 dead, 256 missing and 12,128 injured, as of 10 a.m. Sunday.A woman collects her belongs in Gyegu Town, the quake-hit Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture of Yushu, in northwest China's Qinghai Province, April 17, 2010. The 7.1-magnitude earthquake that struck Yushu of Qinghai Province, left 1,484 dead and 312 still missing, and about 100,000 people were relocated."The top priority is to rescue those still buried alive and treat those injured. Each life must be cherished," Hu said.By Sunday morning, rescuers in the quake-hit Yushu Prefecture in northwest China's Qinghai Province had saved 17,000 lives after Wednesday's 7.1-magnitude earthquake.More than 15,000 rescuers - including over 11,000 People's Liberation Army troops and armed police, 2,800 firefighters and special police forces, and 1,500 earthquake and mine accident rescue specialists - are still searching for quake survivors in Yushu.Most quake-affected people in Yushu have settled in tents and have been provided with food, clean water and other basic needs, Zou Ming, director of disaster relief department under the Ministry of Civil Affairs said at a press conference held Sunday.Some 25,000 tents, 52,000 quilts, 16,000 cotton-padded coats and 850 tonnes of instant food and drinking water have arrived in the quake zone. Another 18,950 cotton-padded tents are on the way.
来源:资阳报