Program rids Tibet of extreme poverty
All counties and prefectures in Southwest China’s Tibet
Autonomous Region have now been lifted out of extreme poverty, reaching a significant
milestone in the region’s poverty alleviation efforts, the regional government
announced on January 13.
The regional government said 19 counties and prefectures,
such as Gyangze county in Xigaze, Markam county in Qamdo, can now delete the
title “poverty-stricken” from their profiles, according to a document sent to
the Global Times by the Tibetan regional government.
This signals that all 74 counties and prefectures in the
region have shaken off extreme poverty.
Tibet, a place deemed as the most difficult to get rid of
extreme poverty, now achieved a huge progress in this arena and moved one step
closer to meet the country’s goal of lifting the entire population out of
extreme poverty by the end of 2020, Zhu Weiqun, a former head of the Ethnic and
Religious Affairs Committee of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s
Political Consultative Conference, told the Global Times.
Zhu, who has long-term and first-hand experience of Tibet’s
poverty alleviation work said the government has laid out measures for
different places to become rich.
For instance, Markam county was encouraged to make use of
their abundant grape resources to develop relevant industries and this
successfully helped all its 206 extreme poverty-stricken families to shake off
poverty in 2018, China Central Television (CCTV) reported in September.
Hinterland villages in Shannan Prefecture started to bolster
their tourism services. Some 49 out of 66 families in Mamacun village of
Shannan work in tourism and the villages’ per capital disposable income reached
19,000 yuan annually ($2,710), CCTV said.
A resident of Nyemo county told the Global Times that
farmers and herdsmen benefited most from poverty alleviation and learned skills
such as handicrafts. They used modern technologies to sell their products
online and gained education opportunities.
Ngabo Jinyuan, president of Tibet’s association of industry
and commerce, said that private enterprises also played an important role in
assisting poverty alleviation and boosting employment.
Altogether 703 private companies registered to take part in
Tibet's poverty alleviation system, investing 2.32 billion yuan ($0.35
billion).
In 2019, more than 82,000 people were lifted out of extreme
poverty and the association helped more than 800 university graduates find jobs
in Tibet, said Jinyuan.
Another effective measure was to support poor students'
education, said Zhu.
Both the central and regional governments issued
preferential policies to relieve poor Tibetan students’ economic burden from
elementary education to university, Pu Zhengxue, an official from Tibet’s
office of poverty alleviation and development, said in a conference in
November.
“Tibet has poor natural conditions, but the poverty
alleviation achievements are quite rich,” said Pu.
“Most importantly, poverty alleviation spread the warmth of
the central government to all ethnic groups in this region and pulls close the
public with the Party and officials,” Pu said.
Southern Xinjiang, Tibetan autonomous prefectures in
Northwest China’s Gansu and Qinghai provinces and some areas in Southwest
China's Yunnan and Sichuan were also deemed as most difficult places to shake
off extreme poverty.
A total 48 extreme poverty-stricken counties in Yunnan got
rid of extreme poverty from 2013-18, China News Service reported in August,
2019. Gansu vowed to lift all of its extreme poverty-stricken counties
including cities and prefectures out of extreme poverty by 2020, Xinhua
reported.
Source: Global Times
Lulang in
Nyingchi city of southeastern Tibet is a Tibetan-inhabited area. With pleasant climate
and beautiful scenery, Lulang is dubbed as the “paradise town”. In the past,
the town suffered poverty despite the rich resources it enjoyed. In recent
years, the government departments have vigorously supported and encouraged
Tibetan people to open homestays with Tibetan characteristics through various
means. Today, almost every Tibetan family in the town runs a homestay, got rid
of poverty and embraced better livelihood.
(Photo by Zhu
Zhenqiang from People’s Daily Online)
Program rids Tibet of extreme poverty
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