Thursday, January 31, 2008

Responsibility

The poor weather is causing all sorts of inconvenience, death, and destruction on the Mainland. Hundreds of people are affected by blizzards hitting the unprepared southern parts of China. The blame is mainly put on mother nature. How can man possibly control the weather? Sounds like a reasonable excuse. However, this only masks the reasons why this natural disaster got out of hand in the first place. It is China afterall, and the Central Government is again to blame. Is blaming the government unreasonable? Let's look at the facts.

January 10th, the Anhui province suffered its first blizzard which caused considerable inconvenince. Chinese officials did not see this as a warning. Fine.

January 21st, a 2nd blizzard hits Middle/Southern China. The heavy snow left 14 regions without power, some without water. Air and land travel (train and highways, not to mention many car accidents) were at a standstill in the affected areas. Somehow, the Central Government took zero action, and corrupt local governments as usual, didn't lift a finger. Excluding the deaths and inconvenience, 800,000 people were stranded at the Guangzhou train station. In need of food and water, they were being gouged by the local stores which tripled their prices for the essentials. People even had to pay to use the toilets. The situation was getting worse and worse. The trains were stuck because no one took the initiative to clear the roads and train tracks.

January 29th, the situation was only getting worse. The Central Government officials finally realised how dire the conditions had become. Premiers Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao visited the train station and the families of the dead. With orders from the Central Government, the PLA was finally mobilized, and the local governments finally took action; action that should have been taken nearly ten days earlier.

The weather was good last year before the CNY holiday, yet travel was still difficult and problematic. How could officials have not seen this coming?

China always wants to be number one. They have a booming economy, they have shot rockets into space, they are holding the most expensive Olympic games in history. However, once again, they have proven to be very low in the rankings when it comes to taking care of their own people.

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