Top leaders urge aid for HK survivors By Teddy Ng (China Daily) Updated: 2006-02-02 07:15
China's top leaders, including President Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao and
Vice-President Zeng Qinghong, have asked all departments concerned to try their
best to tend to the Hong Kong tourists injured in a Tuesday bus accident in
Egypt.
The leaders gave the instructions immediately after they learnt of the
tragedy, a press release from the Foreign Ministry said yesterday.
They required Chinese departments such as the Foreign Ministry and the
Chinese Embassy in Cairo to co-operate closely with the Egyptian side and make
every effort to assist the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR)
government in rescue work and handling the aftermath, it said.
The leaders also asked the SAR government to convey the central government's
condolences to relatives of the victims and consolation to the injured tourists.
The tour bus overturned on a highway in southern Egypt early Tuesday, killing
14 Hong Kong tourists on board and injuring 30 others, some seriously.
The bus was on the outskirts of the Red Sea resort of Hurghada, heading
towards the ancient historic city of Luxor to the southwest, when it rolled over
on the highway, according to MENA, the Egyptian news agency.
The Egyptian driver turned himself in to the police and admitted he had been
speeding. Chinese Embassy spokesman Gong Yufeng said a report by Egyptian police
confirmed the accident was caused by excessive speed.
Heads of the Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council also
conveyed the central government's deep concerns yesterday to Hong Kong Chief
Executive Donald Tsang.
"Every compatriot from Hong Kong is a member of the great family of China," a
spokesman of the office said earlier yesterday.
"We express our deep sorrow and sympathy over the misery they have suffered
during Spring Festival, a time for family reunions of the Chinese."
The Central Government's Liaison Office in Hong Kong also expressed grief to
the victims of the tragedy yesterday.
On Tuesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan said senior
officials of the ministry had called the Egyptian ambassador to China, asking
the Egyptian side to offer timely help and properly handle the aftermath.
The tourists left Hong Kong on Friday for a 10-day tour in Egypt.
The five most seriously injured of the 30 were hospitalized in Cairo, 18 were
receiving treatment in Hurghada, and the seven who were the least injured have
been discharged from hospital, Hong Kong Secretary for Security Ambrose Lee said
yesterday at a press briefing.
About 30 family members and relatives of the victims had arrived in Cairo
last night, and 15 others were en route from Hong Kong.
Lee said the SAR government was grateful for the assistance rendered by the
central government and the staff of the embassy.
The SAR's immigration officers arrived in Cairo last night. Two will stay in
the capital, and the other two will go to Hurghada, where most of the injured
were hospitalized.
One of the tourists, surnamed Wong, yesterday recalled the accident to
Commercial Radio in Hong Kong. "I think the speed was 100 kilometres per hour,"
he said. "The bus had flipped on its left side.
"About 10 tourists were thrown out of the coach and lost consciousness."
Wong also said the medical facilities were inadequate. "I waited for six
hours to be treated," he said.
Another tourist, surnamed Leung, told Commercial Radio that a late response
was partly to blame for some of the deaths.
After the coach overturned, "I saw at least two or three Hong Kong tour
groups passing by us," Leung said. "I was screaming for help, but they did not
stop. If people had got off their buses and helped, more people would have been
saved."
(China Daily 02/02/2006 page1)
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