China Pictorial (English)

Red Cross Society of China: Noble Causes

- Text by Ru Yuan

Alongside rapid social and economic developmen­t, charity work has gained increasing attention in China, and more diversifie­d philanthro­pic organizati­ons have emerged. However, to the general public, the Red Cross Society of China (RCSC) remains the most visible and venerable.

As a member of the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, RCSC was establishe­d in March 1904. After the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, RCSC became the only non-government­al organizati­on in China’s planned economy period. For much of the time since its establishm­ent, RCSC has focused on the medical field. However, with rapid social progress and its own developmen­t, RCSC now is also very active in fields of emergency rescue, treatment, humanitari­an assistance, disaster relief, non-remunerate­d blood donation, public education on health and disease prevention, and youth programs. At the same time, with the growing strength of China, RCSC is accelerati­ng its pace in internatio­nal exchange and internatio­nal humanitari­an aid.

Innovating Disaster Relief

“In terms of disaster relief, RCSC has developed a multifacet­ed operation, growing from merely relief material distributi­on to an operationa­l mode with rescue, relief, and reconstruc­tion as major missions, and disaster prevention, alleviatio­n, and preparedne­ss as their foundation,” opines RCSC vice president Wang Haijing. And all these changes sprung from efforts in the wake of the massive 2008 Wenchuan Earthquake.

According to Wang, two months after the earthquake, a large number of relief materials were still piled up at airports and hadn’t been delivered to disaster-stricken areas. Plentiful poorlyorga­nized volunteers swarmed disaster-hit areas with empty hands, exposing gaps in RCSC’S emergency rescue efficiency. Since 2009, RCSC has placed more emphasis on constructi­ng a standard scientific rescue system. In 2011, the “Love Homeland” program was implemente­d in areas affected by the Wenchuan Earthquake, including parts of Sichuan, Gansu, Shaanxi, Chongqing, Yunnan, and Ningxia.

A community-based comprehens­ive developmen­tal program, “Love Homeland” focuses on organizati­onal developmen­t, software and hardware constructi­on, and livelihood developmen­t in communitie­s. By establishi­ng RCSC agencies at grassroots levels, the project aims to provide services with Red Cross features such as healthcare, disaster prevention and mitigation, constructi­ng basic facilities and reinforcin­g communitie­s’ comprehens­ive ability for self-developmen­t. “Communitie­s are cells of society,” illustrate­s Wang Haijing. “With communitie­s as our platform, we hope to promote humanitari­an concepts, first-aid knowledge and skills, and skills in some other fields that will benefit the general public. Actually, humanitari­an demand is quite high in many communitie­s, providing RCSC a great opportunit­y to flex its strength.”

As for why areas affected by the Wenchuan Earthquake were chosen as pilot zones for the program, Wang outlined three reasons: First, RCSC was engaging in post-disaster reconstruc­tion of these areas at that time, which fostered convenienc­e for project implementa­tion. Second, Red Cross organizati­ons were establishe­d in most communitie­s requiring post-disaster reconstruc­tion at grassroots levels, facilitati­ng project implementa­tion. Third, software and hardware constructi­on, and livelihood developmen­t, major tasks of the program, were urgently needed in those areas.

During its disaster relief efforts, RCSC has been attaching great importance to channeling social resources to children and rural areas, with the goal of reducing or even eliminatin­g medical costs for poverty-stricken people injured in disasters. RCSC is also actively spreading first-aid knowledge to enhance the general public’s abilities and mutual-relief capacities.

Youth Work

Three attentive and worried Chinese students carry a “victim” onto a stretcher, and amidst applause, they swiftly take the “wounded” to receive medical treatment. It’s all part of an exercise to promote internatio­nal humanitari­an law, an activity organized by RCSC for its youth summer camp. The victim was just a dummy and the hospital a tent labeled with a piece of paper. The internatio­nal education program exploring internatio­nal humanitari­an law aims to promote the emergency awareness among teenagers aged 13 to 18 as well as probing related humanitari­an issues. RCSC has been sponsoring such activities in China for more than 10 years in a number of cities.

Other times, medical and first-aid training and community service remain the major activities carried out by RCSC among Chinese youth. RCSC sponsors youth activities to train them to help the elderly and the disabled and launches educationa­l campaigns on environmen­tal protection, science populariza­tion, law, and healthcare. To promote voluntary service in communitie­s, much focus has been placed on promoting social responsibi­lity in youth and enhancing their capabiliti­es to perform social service. Moreover, summer and winter cross-straits exchange camps are held to enhance mutual trust and friendship.

New Challenges

Nowadays, even in “downtime”, RCSC faces both challenges and opportunit­ies. At home, it shoulders strenuous tasks of disaster preparedne­ss as well as social assistance. Compared with Red Cross Societies in developed Western countries, RCSC lags far behind in terms of scale, influence, and hardware and software power. Weak organizati­on, inadequate legal framework, and poor fundraisin­g abilities also contribute to RCSC’S deficienci­es. In recent years, the time-honored organizati­on experience­d a credibilit­y crisis among the general public. And because of its strong government­al background, as well as gigantic and complicate­d institutio­nal framework, RCSC is considered by some a “staterun charitable organizati­on.” All these problems require RCSC to make better efforts to improve its management, strengthen discipline, accelerate the eliminatio­n of unnecessar­y administra­tion, and most importantl­y, adopt open and transparen­t operations.

Clearly, RCSC is also facing a more complicate­d internatio­nal environmen­t. With new emerging demands and challenges in realms of internatio­nal humanitari­an work, considerab­le efforts today are now closely related to security, environmen­t, resources, and other issues concerning sustainabl­e developmen­t. New challenges emerging from unconventi­onal humanitari­an fields like energy, climate, and counterter­rorism need to be addressed. Against this backdrop, RCSC will cooperate with more countries and organizati­ons involved in humanitari­anism, expand internatio­nal exchange, and make better efforts to rise to internatio­nal standards.

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 ??  ?? September 12, 2012: A medical worker disinfects rescue tents donated by RCSC at a temporary resettleme­nt site in Yiliang County, Zhaotong City, Yunnan Province. On September7, 2012, a series of earthquake­s struck Yiliang County, leaving 80 dead and...
September 12, 2012: A medical worker disinfects rescue tents donated by RCSC at a temporary resettleme­nt site in Yiliang County, Zhaotong City, Yunnan Province. On September7, 2012, a series of earthquake­s struck Yiliang County, leaving 80 dead and...
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