| 'Go-west' concerns:
poverty, ecology (03/10/2003 )
China's top legislators and advisers vowed to shake off poverty and at the
same time restore the ecological balance in the nation's "go-west"
drive.
A press conference held by the 10th National Committee of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) on Saturday revealed
that China plans to relocate more than 7 million poverty-stricken
rural residents from areas blighted by extreme, adverse natural
conditions, as part of its effort to eliminate poverty in the next
decade.
Lu Feijie, a CPPCC member and deputy head of the State Council
Leading Group for Poverty Alleviation and Development said that
funding for anti-poverty endeavours will be increased.
Relocation, however, will be on a voluntary basis, with the government
providing those involved with the necessary assistance to build
new homes and find incomes, said Lu.
He revealed government plans to spend 3 to 5 billion yuan (US$362
million to 605 million) on resettlement.
Since 1986, China's banks have extended special loans of up to
125 billion yuan (US$15 billion) to poor farmers.
In the past decade, more than 2.7 million people moved to new areas
under a government resettlement programme, but China still has about
28 million impoverished people in rural, remote areas, said Lu.
While the relocation is expected to bring about a better life for
the destitute in China's west, the move will also significantly
help the region's ecological system.
Official sources said the central government has decided to conduct
ecological emigration and resettlement projects to transfer the
poverty-stricken population living in areas with a fragile eco-system
and harsh natural conditions.
"Improvement of the environment will be taken as the prime
task at the starting point of China's large-scale economic development
of its western regions," said Wang Zhibao, deputy director
of the Office for the Development of the Western Regions under the
State Council.
Wang, who is also a member of the 10th CPPCC National Committee,
indicated at a press conference over the weekend that the ecological
projects to be undertaken include the protection of natural forests,
returning farmland to forests, desertification control, and the
closure of pastures for the renewal of grasslands.
More than 500 billion yuan (US$60.5 billion) of funds has been
earmarked for these four areas, with all the funds being directly
transferred to the farmers, said Wang.
The press conference focused mainly on China's poverty alleviation
endeavours and the development of the less-developed central and
western regions, which remains a major topic for legislators and
advisers.
Li Zibin, deputy director of the office and a deputy to the National
People's Congress (NPC), said at another press conference held by
the NPC on Saturday that China would draw on the successful experience
of other nations when it came to formulating policies geared to
the situation in China's western areas.
Construction of about 36 key projects has been ongoing in the western
region over the past three years. A further 14 key projects, involving
a total investment of more than 130 billion yuan (US$15.7 billion),
are set to begin in 2003.
(China Daily)
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