Yunnan’s NPC delegate takes concrete action to solve people’s problems
By Ye Chuanzeng, People’s Daily
Sugarcanes are either eaten or trampled upon.
This is a glimpse at a sugarcane field destroyed by Asian elephants that covers
around 5 mu (0.33 hectare) in Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture of
southwest China’s Yunnan province.
Zi Yanping, a member of the National Committee
of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), as well as
the vice president of a health center in Jino township, Xishuangbanna Dai
Autonomous Prefecture, arrived at the sugarcane field for investigation after
driving two hours in scorching heat.
Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture is a
major habitat for Asian elephants, a species under first-class national
protection in China, and the prefecture has established a national nature
reserve to protect the tropical forests where Asian elephants live. However,
the gradually rising number of Asian elephants in the region is also resulting
in increasing “conflicts” between local residents and the animal.
Zi learned that the farmer would lose at least
10,000 yuan from the destroyed sugarcane field as every mu of sugarcanes
generates an income of around 2,000 yuan, and this does not include the
farmer’s prior input. The Asian elephants’ activities are causing severe
impacts on local farmers’ production and life, Zi said.
As one that has lived in Xishuangbanna Dai
Autonomous Prefecture for years, Zi knows the prefecture has a special
compensation program for damage caused by wildlife. According to the program,
local farmers can receive 600 yuan for every mu of rice destroyed, 400 yuan for
every mu of corns destroyed and 800 yuan for every mu of sugarcanes destroyed.
“Farmers earn 2,000 yuan from every mu of
sugarcanes, and 800 yuan from corns, so the current compensation program is
only able to cover around half of the farmers’ losses.” That is a conclusion
reached by Zi after investigating in three villages.
After learning all the 6,133 cases of damages
caused by wildlife in the prefecture since 2011, Zi found that 322 had
casualties and 66,963 households were affected. Asian elephants were the major
“perpetrators.”
“We must try our best to reduce the damages on
lives and property of the people while ensuring protection over the Asian
elephants, and to raise the compensation standard remains an urgent task,” Zi
said, deciding to make a relevant proposal to this year’s National People's
Congress (NPC).
The preparation of the proposal started last
June and lasted till this April. To better it, Zi consulted experts with
forestry departments and verified the latest statistics with the local
government. In her proposal, it is suggested that the compensation standard be
raised for damages caused by wildlife, including the Asian elephants.
Zi became a delegate of the 12th National
People’s Congress since 2013, and a member of the CPPCC in 2018. As one that
works at the primary-level health system, she had proposed to raise the income
for rural doctors. As one from the Jino ethnic minority, she had proposed to
protect the traditional culture of the Jino and enhance the input of
educational resources in areas inhabited by ethnic minority groups.
The proposals raised by Zi were in different
areas, but every one of them was raised by her after field trips and
investigations. In recent years, Zi’s has left her footsteps on almost every
corner of Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture.
“Only by studying the primary level can we have
a thorough understanding of the difficulties encountered by the people and
present their concerns to the country,” she said.
An herd of elephants that have strayed near Mengla county, Xishuangbanna
Dai Autonomous Prefecture of Yunnan province for six days, cause damages to
local villagers and farms, Sept. 11, 2008. Photo by Li Yunsheng/People’s Daily
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Yunnan’s NPC delegate takes concrete action to solve people’s problems
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