Administrative Divisions
  Agriculture
  Banking And Insurance
  Culture And Art
  Education
  Environmental Protection
  Finance And Taxation
  Foreign Relations
  History
  Industry
  Medical And Health Work
  Opening To The Outside Wide
  Physical Culture And Sports
  Physical Geography
  Political System And State Structure
  Population And Ethnic Groups
  Religions and Social Customs
  Science And Technology
  Tourism
  The Course of economic Development
  The Peoples' Livelihood
  The Socialist Market Economy
  Transport Posts And
Telecommunications
  Urban Construction And Real Estate
     
 

Tibetan Women's Rights Well Protected
(11/26/2001)


The rights of Tibetan women in all walks of life have well protected over the past five years.

Statistics from the Tibetan Women Federation show that some 32.82 percent of cadres in the Tibet Autonomous Region are women at the end of 2000.

Illiteracy rate of Tibetan women in 2000 was 22.2 percentage points lower than that in 1995, as the strategy of revitalizing China through science and technology is implemented in Tibet.

With the help of Project Hope and Spring Bud Program, 85.6 percent of school-aged girls had entered school, 18.2 percentage points higher than 1990.

Proportions of female students in schools in the region have witnessed a steady increase. In average institutes of higher learning, the proportion stood at 44 percent; vocational technical schools, 51.5 percent; average high schools, 47 percent; specialized middle schools, 50 percent; primary schools, 46.1 percent; and schools for adults, 50 percent.

There were 15,200 female specialized technical personnel in Tibet at the end of last year, up 22.6 percent over 1995.

At the end of 2000, some 46.8 percent of jobholders in Tibet were women, with the number totaling 581,700, among whom 81,400 live in town, 14.17 percentage points higher than 1995, and some 500,300 live in rural areas.

Females working in the industries of manufacture, social services and medical care accounted for 47.58 percent of the industries' total.

With the constant improvement in medical care, some 48 maternal and child hygiene centers had been established in Tibet, which had benefited nearly 545,000 mothers and children.

Some 20.1 percent of women delivered their children at hospitals in Tibet, 16.5 percentage points higher than 1990.

(eastday.com)


 

 
     
     
  Lastest News  
  Facts and Figures  
  Background  
  White Papers  
  Catalogue of Tibetan Studies  
  Hot Links
Tibet China
Roof of the World
Tibet Web
China's Tibet
 
       
 
    ©Copyright 2001 By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved.