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State Council nods new opening-up pilot zone in southwest China
2016-08-13 07:48 | Xinhua | Editor: Mo Hong'e

China's State Council has approved Pingxiang, a city of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region on the border with Vietnam, to be a new opening-up pilot zone, a statement said on Friday.

The plan for the new zone will be published by the National Development and Reform Commission, the top economic planner, according to the cabinet website.

Pingxiang is Guangxi's second "key pilot zone for development and opening-up" after Dongxing, approved in August 2012.

Southwestern Yunnan Province's Mengla bordering Laos, and Ruili, a major border crossing between China and Myanmar, as well as northern Inner Mongolia's Manzhouli city and northeastern Heilongjiang Province's Suifenhe-Dongning zone in the neighborhood of Russia, are also on the pilot zone list.

The pilot zones were expected to play a positive role in promoting the Belt and Road Initiative, boosting opening-up and facilitating the mutually beneficial cooperation with neighboring countries.
 
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Chinese youths beating poverty through hard work
Xinhua Published: 2016/8/14 18:48:39

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Chen Ze'en, 26, keeps bees in a small village in Northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region for around a year. Photo: Xinhua


The career that Chen Ze'en, 26, had chosen to pursue not only changed his own life but also those residents of a remote village in one of the poorest parts of China.

Chen has been keeping bees in a small village in Northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region for around a year.

This summer, the size of his swarm has increased to about 200 hives. He expects to harvest two tons of honey and sell it for 300,000 yuan ($45,000).

The village is home to a local species of bee that produces sweet, pure honey. But without proper technology and investment, the business was barely viable. Chen brought new beekeeping techniques and a modern business model to the area that villagers found "a bit strange but smart."

"The village has a very good natural environment, free of any industrial pollution. I am trying to highlight the clean and organic nature of our product," Chen said. He is now registering a company and brand name.

"I am also thinking of developing new honey products, for instance, honey wine," he said.

Chen's apiary has inspired villagers and he does not hesitate to share his knowledge. About 100 people now profit from the beekeeping business.

Having set the goal of raising the annual incomes of about 55 million of the country's poorest people to over 2,800 yuan by 2020, China values young people like Chen and has high expectations for what they can bring to remote villages.

For around a decade, college graduates have been hired to work as village officials on a large scale. These young officials are now a force to mobilize rural people themselves in the fight against poverty.

In Southwest China's Sichuan Province, a government program supports young officials' startup projects, including growing local specialties and selling farm produce online.

South China's Guangdong Province has focused on encouraging young people to stay at home. Agricultural technicians are invited to teach them the latest farming skills and financial assistance is given to new businesses.

Down to the countryside



A more traditional way for young people to help their less well-off fellow citizens is for college students to volunteer to teach in rural schools for a few years.

Li Xingjian attended Beijing's Renmin University of China and taught at a rural middle school in Sichuan in 2014 when he was a graduate student.

Many of Li's charges were "left-behind children," living with relatives, often their grandparents, while their parents work in cities. Among several hundred students, only a dozen or so went to institution each year and usually to small colleges with inadequate teaching resources.

"Compared with what I taught them, simply my being there was more helpful. I felt like a window through which they got a glimpse of an unknown outside world," he said.

Li's students found someone they could look up to. "One of my students wrote me an 18-page letter, telling me that I was the first person to praise him and give him a present in his 17 years of life. He said I gave him hope," Li said.

Although these programs aim to help needy people in rural areas, those who offer help benefit as well. Many volunteers were inspired by their experiences when choosing their careers.

Since 2012, Renmin University has sent about 1,000 students to villages for a short program every summer. Lu Xiaotong, from Central China's Hunan Province, took part twice.

"Before visiting the village in my home province, I thought that I knew rural China quite well," she said. Instead, the grinding poverty shocked her and she witnessed how one simple project, such as building a paved road, could change the lives of everyone.

"The experience gave me a sense of responsibility and motivation. I found myself pondering what I could do to actually help," Lu said.
 
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Online shopping growth in rural China outpaces urban areas
Xinhua, August 18, 2016

Growth in online retail purchases by China's rural residents outpaced that of urban dwellers in the second quarter, official data showed on Wednesday.

In the first six months, online retail sales to rural residents exceeded 310 billion yuan (46.9 billion U.S. dollars), Shen Danyang, spokesperson of the Ministry of Commerce (MOC), said at a press briefing.

Rural online retail sales remarkably outstripped urban sales, he added.

MOC data showed that, in the second quarter, rural online sales grew by 13.48 percent from the first quarter. The growth rate was at least 4 percentage points higher than the growth in sales to urban residents.

In the first six months, purchases by rural residents accounted for 14.14 percent of the country's total online sales.

Shen noted the growth rate in rural areas in underdeveloped central and western regions stood at 24.57 percent, at least 10 percentage points higher than the growth registered in better-off rural areas.

Rural residents spent most of their money on clothing, shoes, home improvement and digital gadgets.

For online sales of services in rural areas, online travel booking contributed 44.54 billion yuan.

A report by the China Internet Network Information Center showed that, of China's 688 million Internet users as of the end of 2015, 195 million, or 28.4 percent, were rural residents.
 
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Survey: Flocks of young people return home from big cities
By Wu Jin
China.org.cn, August 18, 2016

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A recent survey shows that an increasing number of young migrant workers are heading home from big cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. [File photo]


Zhang Yuanyuan, a 28-year-old woman, just put an end to her nine-year long migrant living in Shanghai, where she worked as a shop assistant selling children's clothing.

Expecting her second child in a few days, she packed up and headed to her hometown in Zibo, Shandong Province. Unlike her last experience of being forced to leave her daughter behind because she needed to secure her job in Shanghai, this time, she will have plenty of time to spend with her children after she submitted her resignation and returned home to open her own store.

Although there are a constellation of local stores that sell children's clothes, Zhang said, she is confident in her experience in Shanghai which enables her to sort out prettier clothes for children at competitive prices.

The story of Zhang is no exception.

According to a survey conducted recently by China Youth Daily, 52.8 percent of 2,000 respondents noted that there are increasing numbers of young people leaving metropolises to return to their less developed hometowns.

The survey also found that about 60.9 percent of respondents who have returned home are expected to start their own businesses, while 52.5 percent are desperate to run their own start-ups.

Zhang said, almost all her friends at her age in her hometown have settled down. Some inherit their parents' businesses, while some work for privately-owned enterprises and a few hold jobs as local administrative officials or teachers.

Cai Zhidong (a pseudo name), a local county governmental official from Shanxi Province revealed that young people are reluctant to accept a job as a local official in counties and townships. Most of them have joined in the legion of start-ups and only a few who expect stable jobs work in local governments.

However, to flee from the overcrowded cities to idyllic hometowns is not all that satisfactory as the young people who return home soon find that to start a business from scratch is very difficult in the towns and villages where the business opportunities are rare.

Lu Jia has tried several start-ups since heading home in Inner Mongolia after spending six years working in Beijing.

"I started running online shops, cosmetics agencies and even engaged in vendor selling," Lu recalled. "But I have not found a lucrative business and all my efforts in the last few years were spent in vain."

For most returnees, rare business and job opportunities become the major problem hindering the development of their careers in their hometowns. About 54.8 percent of respondents complained about insufficient job opportunities, while 44.4 percent blamed the unfavorable working environment and 27.1 percent reportedly experienced sophisticated interpersonal relationships.

Despite these temporary difficulties, Cai believes the working and living environments in the second-and-third-tier cities, towns or villages have been improved greatly since the anti-corruption campaign initiated a few years ago.

"The young people will be more likely to enjoy fair opportunities and streamlined administrative procedures when the efforts of the anti-corruption campaign and the relegation of powers are paid off," Cai said. "I believe towns and villages will have a bright future to attract more young people to settle down."

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China's west will likely become a haven for SMEs.
 
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This inland port is getting bigger. It will also play an important role in OBOR.

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Xinjiang's Horgos opens new customs office
2016-08-19 16:55:13 Xinhua Web Editor: Guan Chao

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A file photo shows the Horgos International Border Cooperation Center, in northwest China’s Xinjiang Autonomous Region. [Photo: Chinanews.com]

The Horgos International Border Cooperation Center on the China-Kazakhstan border, in northwest China's Xinjiang Autonomous Region, officially opened its customs office on Thursday. The office has been in preparation since 2007.

The customs office, which is under the administration of Urumqi Customs, mainly provides services for the Chinese side of a cross-border free trade zone.

After opening, the customs office hopes to offer strong support for the center, for it to become a key engine in China's westward trade, said Zhao Ge, director of Urumqi Customs.

In September 2004, China and Kazakhstan signed an agreement to create the Horgos International Border Cooperation Center, a free trade zone. The center opened in 2012.

Customs procedures have now been streamlined at the center, which covers 3.43 square km on the Chinese side and 1.85 square km on the Kazakh side.

The center has seen rising flow of people and goods. As of July, it has recorded 9.46 million visitors and a trade volume of 878 million U.S. dollars since opening.
 
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Li: Infrastructure boost planned to aid rural Jiangxi
China Daily, August 23, 2016

Premier Li Keqiang vowed on Monday to further improve infrastructure such as highways and internet connections in impoverished regions of southern Jiangxi province, where the Long March started nearly 82 years ago.

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Premier Li Keqiang goes to a villager's house during a visit to Ruijin city in East China's Jiangxi province, Aug 22, 2016. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]

The premier said the government will invest more in highways, power grids and irrigation facilities for the region, during a visit to the Aobeigang Production Base for navel oranges in the city of Ruijin in Ganzhou, Jiangxi.

The Communist Party of China established its first national government in Ruijin in 1931 and started the Long March in 1934 to establish new revolutionary bases in Northwest China's Shaanxi province.

Li's visit to the city follows the State Council's development plan for the region, released in 2012, which aimed to cultivate industries suitable for local conditions and improve rural infrastructure and farmers' living conditions by 2015.

Ganzhou produces 1.28 million metric tons of navel oranges each year, China's largest yield of the crop and accounting for 13.4 percent of the global production. Local official Chen Baofu said the production base was opened in 1994 and now covers over 1,000 hectares that have helped lift about 3,300 locals from poverty.

Li was pleased to hear that each hectare of these oranges can produce 120,000 yuan in income ($18,000) per year. Farmer Deng Zhuping earns more than 120,000 yuan net income annually with oranges from 1.2 hectares of rented land.

"The price of navel oranges has increased by more than 10 percent over the past few years," Deng said.

Some farmers said they have started to sell the fruit online, and the premier said more investments will be made to install faster internet connections in villages to support the farmers' commerce.

"I hope the internet will help you (farmers) sell oranges, and you should adopt delicacy management processes to produce high-quality goods that lead market demand and in turn create more profits," Li said.

The plan also encompasses providing safe drinking water, new houses, new schools and upgraded power grids in rural areas.

Li visited the village of Huawu, where 102 families moved into new homes built next to their shabby old houses with subsidies from the central government in 2014. Now farmers rent rooms to visiting tourists in their new homes.

"The area's economy lags behind that of the neighboring provinces of Fujian and Guangdong, due to disadvantages in transportation, talent and way of thinking. But it has great growth potential if the infrastructure improves," said Li Minghui, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences.
 
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This is good news for Xinjiang. Hopefully more companies will open new facilities in Urumqi economic and technological development zone.

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Guangzhou Auto starts building 240-mln-USD Xinjiang plant
Source:Xinhua Published: 2016/8/25 0:18:37

Guangzhou Automobile Group Co., Ltd on Wednesday started construction of its assembly plant in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

With an investment of 1.6 billion yuan (240 million US dollars), the plant has a designed annual production capacity of 100,000 cars and will create 1,500 jobs.

Located in the Urumqi economic and technological development zone, the plant is scheduled to begin production of gasoline and electric cars as early as the end of 2017, said Zeng Qinghong, general manager of Guangzhou Automobile Group.

Zeng said the plant will supply western Chinese regions and central Asian countries.

Zhou Yawei, a member of the Standing Committee of the Guangzhou Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China, said the investment answers the central government's call to help Xinjiang's development and push forward the Belt and Road Initiative.
 
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Free books enlighten Xinjiang minds
China Daily, August 26, 2016

Sixteen bookstores in the China's Xinjiang region are donating books to the poor as part of an ongoing charity drive.

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Letao Bookstore owner Li Duan (right) introduces the idea of donating books to a customer in Urumqi. [Photo/China Daily]

Inspired by a popular charity activity in Western countries where cafe customers buy an extra cup of coffee for a person unable to pay, the book-donating activity-called "Book On The Wall"-invites customers to buy extra books and then post the titles and prices on the wall instead of taking them home. The books are offered free of charge to people who don't have the means to pay.

Yalkun Osman, one of the founders of the activity, said, "We hope to help poverty-stricken people who like to read but have no money for books."

Of the 16 bookstores participating in the activity, two are in Urumqi, the regional capital-Nawayi Bookstore and Letao Bookstore. They took part in July.

Li Duan, 60, owner of Letao Bookstore, said she decided to join the effort after she learned about it from Yalkun Osman and found that there were many poor people who needed books.

"Before the activity, I used to see some poor children who liked very much to read books but they had no money to buy any," Li said. "I often let them read books in my store. That experience made me want to participate," said Li, who is from Henan province but has lived in Urumqi for more than 10 years.

On the wall of Nawayi Bookstore, more than 20 titles donated by customers waited to be claimed.

Guzalnur, the owner, said she finds the charity activity inspiring-so much so that she has provided other free books that were not listed on the wall but were needed to teach reading.

To support the activity, the two bookstores gave 15 to 60 percent discounts to the book donors.

"This bookstore was opened by my son when he was a college student to earn money for his tuition, and he got help from others when he ran the store. Now he had graduated, and I took part in the charity to help others in return," Li said.

Mahmutjan, who recently picked up a Uygur-Han bilingual children's book free for his 10-year-old son, said he was grateful for the activity, which gives people like him a chance to get books for their knowledge-thirsty children.

According to Yalkun Osman, some people didn't notice the activity, possibly because they didn't fully understand the idea, or because of the fast development of the internet, which has changed reading habits.

"But the most important factor is that curiosity and desire for knowledge has decreased, so some people were not willing to spend money for books. They were more willing to buy luxury goods. They pay no attention to their minds or to the training of their children," Yalkun Osman said, adding that the Book On The Wall project was not only a charity activity but also a kind of cultural outreach that could help realize a small dream for poor people who yearn to read.
 
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China, Kazakhstan to jointly build fertilizer production hub
(Xinhua) 14:44, August 29, 2016

CHONGQING, Aug. 29 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese firm and a Kazakhstan firm have agreed to form a joint venture to develop a major fertilizer production and distribution hub in southwest China's Chongqing municipality.

Under the deal between Kazakhstan Potash Corporation (KPC) and Chongqing Agricultural Production Material Group, the two sides will jointly build a major potash fertilizer distribution center and the largest compound fertilizer producer in western China, with an annual turnover of around 3 million tonnes.

The fertilizer products will be sold in southwest China and exported to Japan and Southeast Asian countries, said Wan Zhongcheng, chairman of Chongqing Agricultural Production Material Group.

The cooperation is seen as a practical move aligning with China's Belt and Road Initiative, which aims to build a trade and infrastructure network connecting Asia with Europe and Africa, along ancient trade routes.

As part of the deal, potash from Kazakhstan will enter Chongqing through the Chongqing-Europe railway system, passing through northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, which will greatly cut transport costs, Wan said.

The two firms will also set up a joint venture and develop a comprehensive logistics base that integrates road, waterway and rail transport in Jiangjin District, Chongqing, a city on the Yangtze River, China's longest waterway.

The joint venture aims to realize an annual revenue of more than 20 billion yuan (about 3 billion U.S. dollars) in three to five years, with a profit of 200 million yuan. The venture plans to list on an overseas stock market.

KPC, listed in Australia, is a mineral exploration company which owns the rights to three large potash deposits in Kazakhstan. The Chongqing agricultural firm is one of the largest of its kind and a key fertilizer supplier in China.

China needs about 14 million tonnes of potassium chloride per year, about half of which is imported.
 
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China's first high-capacity solar thermal power plant put into operation

August 30, 2016, http://en.people.cn/n3/2016/0830/c90000-9107732.html

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China's first solar thermal power plant with high-capacity energy storage successfully began operation in Delingha, Qinghai province on Aug. 29. (Photo/People's Daily Online)

On Aug. 29, Delingha SUPCON 10 MW Power Plant in Delingha, Qinghai province began operation. SUPCON is China's first solar thermal power plant with high-capacity energy storage, and just the third such power plant anywhere in the world. The other two are located in the U.S. and Spain.

The core technology is based on SUPCON's independent research and development. The plant boasts advanced systems for solar collection, heat absorption, energy storage and electricity generation. Molten salt is used as the heat-exchange fluid, despite the fact that storage of molten salt energy is considered to be extremely difficult. Fortunately, after six years of hard work, SUPCON has overcome that difficulty.

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China's first solar thermal power plant with high-capacity energy storage successfully began operation in Delingha, Qinghai province on Aug. 29. (Photo/People's Daily Online)

Molten salt has a wide temperature range in its liquid state. Thus, using the substance as the heat-exchange fluid means that the system's generating efficiency will be improved, the heat-exchange process will be simplified and energy loss will be minimized. In this way, high-capacity thermal storage and large-scale generation are both made possible.

Solar thermal power generates stable, continuous and high-quality power that can be produced on a schedule. It is widely considered to be a clean energy most likely to replace coal. The International Energy Agency predicts that solar thermal power is capable of meeting 11.3 percent of global electricity demand in 2050.

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Innovated in China. Made by China.
 
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Scientists reveal sources of glacier melting accelerator in Tibetan Plateau
Source: Xinhua 2016-08-30 18:56:19

LHASA, Aug. 30 (Xinhua) -- Fossil fuel and biomass are sources of black carbon, the substance that has accelerated glacier melting across the Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau, research has revealed.

The paper, published by "Nature Communications" on Aug. 23, found varying contributions from fossil fuel and biomass combustion to black carbon in the Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau.

In the remote, northern plateau, black carbon is predominantly derived from the burning of fossil fuel, while fossil fuel contributions to black carbon in the snow pits of the inner plateau region are lower, implying contributions from internal sources, such as yak dung combustion, according to the paper.

The study revealed an approximately equal influence of biomass combustion sources within the southern Tibetan Plateau/Himalayas that mainly stem from emissions from the Indo-Gangetic Plain.

The research was conducted by researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and Stockholm University.

The study provided data for the further analysis of air transported black carbon, and information that can be used by policymakers addressing glacier melting and emissions, said Kang Shichang, one of the authors of the report and a researcher with the Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources under the CAS.

It indicated pollution from burning yak dung for cooking or heating among herdsmen and farmers in some areas of the plateau might be higher than first imagined, said Kang.

In Tibet,about 74 percent of the autonomous region's population live in rural area, many of whom use yak or sheep dung as a heat source.

The region aims to replace traditional energy sources with electricity to reduce pollution.

The wider use of electricity will save 177,000 tonnes of coal and cut emissions of carbon dioxide by 400,000 tonnes in the next five years, according to the regional energy substitution plan for 2016-2020.

The plan, which is backed by 2.2 billion yuan (329 million U.S. dollars), will focus on on construction, transportation and domestic life, including improving accessibility to electric cookers, boilers, heaters and vehicles.
 
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Yueriguli, a 28-year-old Uyghur official in a village in northwestern China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, agreed to model for photos taken of the local melon harvest in order to help boost sales. Tangnuer Village, where she works, sits at the intersection of Taklamakan Desert and the Tarim Basin. With a fragile ecology plagued by strong winds, sandstorms and drought, local villagers rely heavily on the melon harvest.

After graduating from Xinjiang University in 2012, Yueriguli has been working with the Bachu county-level bureau on agricultural equipment management. She offered to work in Tangnuer Village in 2016, as her father used to work in the poorest village in Bachu County.

“The melons have been harvested. They have been hard to sell recently due to transportation issues. I hope that by modeling with the melons, I can help them to sell better,” the young woman said. (Photo/Courtesy of Photographer Zhang Yi)










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http://en.people.cn/n3/2016/0830/c90000-9107492-11.html

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Missed the Mainland's hami melons. Here, it is so expensive this year. Fruit, in general, has become expensive here. :(
 
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Tourism in Xinjiang hits record high in H1
Source: Xinhua 2016-08-30 22:32:35

URUMQI, Aug. 30 (Xinhua) -- Tourism in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region hit a record high in the first half of 2016, the regional tourism bureau said Tuesday.

In the first six months, more than 26 million domestic tourists visited Xinjiang, up 15.5 percent year on year, said Li Jidong, Communist Party secretary of the regional tourism bureau.

Tourist spending reached 34.5 billion yuan (about 5.2 billion U.S. dollars), up 16.8 percent from the same period last year. The region has attracted almost 730,000 foreign tourists, up 9 percent. Foreign tourists spent 216 million U.S. dollars there, up 17.4 percent, Li said.

The rise was mainly attributed to the National Winter Games in January.

Nineteen provinces and cities which support Xinjiang's social and economic development have organized tour groups to the region.

Xinjiang has also improved tourism infrastructure, Li said.
 
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National nutrition plan benefits 33.6 million rural students
(People's Daily Online) 16:41, August 31, 2016

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Due to strained economic conditions, many primary school students in Liancai Township used to go to school each day without having breakfast. This was the case, at least, until 2011, when China launched a nutrition improvement program for students in rural regions, which has since been implemented in the most impoverished and remote regions in China.

On a common school day at Yanhe Primary School in Hubei, fourth-grade students Lele and Niuniu carry a basket full of milk cartons into their classroom during recess. According to the school's principal, since the program’s launch, the students at Yanhe Primary School have always received a snack of milk and eggs or milk and cakes during their class break.

Since 2011, the central government has set aside 159 billion yuan for the program. The World Bank and United Nations Food Program have both spoken highly of the program, and in the five years after its launch, the program has been implemented in 137,000 schools in 29 provinces, benefiting a total of 33.6 million students. Virtually no rural students must begin school now without first enjoying a nutritious breakfast.

According to the Chinese Center For Disease Control And Prevention, a number of tangible and positive changes have occurred since the program began. Data shows that both the average height and weight of students have increased, and the rate of anemia incidence has decreased.

By the current standard, the country gives each student a daily subsidy of about 4 yuan, which covers the cost of meals at school and reduces the burden on families. This year, China will further expand the coverage of its program, ensuring that even more students around China are able to enjoy safe, tasty food and make the most of their educations.
 
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Officials and workers sent to aid China Tibet's development, boost unity
By Zhang Yiqian in Lhasa
Source: Global Times Published: 2016/8/31

Officials and workers sent to aid region’s development, boost unity

In order to develop Tibet and keep it tightly linked with the rest of China, the central government launched a program in the 1980s to send officials and workers to the region. Locals benefited from the knowledge these outsiders brought, but some argued that the officials' terms are too short for them to have a great impact and that they sometimes provide things which locals do not need.

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A Tibetan woman carrying her child. Photo: IC

When official Li Xiaonan told the residents of a Tibetan village about his plans to install running water, they were vehemently opposed.

"The water might overflow and flood my home while I'm out herding sheep," one villager told him. Instead of gambling on change, they would rather fetch water the traditional way, by filling containers at the river around a mile from their homes.

However, in addition to the inconvenience, the river's water contained bugs and was tainted with traces of cattle feces.

It took Li a great deal of talking to convince villagers that the water from the faucets he wanted to install would be safer. He had to go from door to door, trying to convince every single resident to accept the project. But once some households made the leap and installed faucets, others began to see that it was a good idea - especially during the region's harsh winters - and followed suit.

Li's experience is fairly typical among the people sent to work in China's Tibet Autonomous Region from other parts of the country over the years. Since the 1980s, the government has sent officials and ordinary workers to the region, to aid economic development and maintain unity.


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An aid worker from Heilongjiang Province is offered tea by a Tibetan farmer. Photo: IC

Serve the people

Li works at the State Assets Administration Committee of the State Council. He has been in Tibet for three years, and was initially assigned to the post to help State-owned companies in the region to modernize their structure and operations.

But during his stay in Lhasa, he had the idea of going to the countryside to see how rural Tibetans live their lives, so he asked to be reassigned to a village for six months.

The system of sending officials to Tibet began in 1984 after the second meeting of the central government to discuss work related to Tibet.

During that meeting, the central government reviewed Tibet's general situation and decided that workers from the country's richer eastern regions should be sent there to lead fishery, electrification and construction projects.

In 1995 the system expanded to include officials who would be sent to Tibet for a few years.

After more than 20 years of this system in operation, a total of 17 provinces, 60 central government departments and 17 State-owned enterprises have sent more than 6,000 officials to Tibet and parts of adjacent Sichuan Province with significant ethnic Tibetan populations.

The seventh group of assigned workers just finished their terms in June and the eighth were sent in August.

The goal of this system is to enhance both Tibet's economic and cultural connections with the rest of the country, in order to develop the region. The officials chosen for this role have to act as the face of the government, emphasizing the benefits of development it can offer.

In reality, during their terms, most officials struggle to fulfill any ambitious plans they may have made in the face of the low general skill level in their assignment area and difficulties beyond their imagination.

When Beijing middle school teacher Zhang Dali came to Lhasa in 2014, he found himself dealing with teachers who hadn't received much training and a school whose students hadn't chosen to be there, but had ended up there after not making it into other, better institutions.

In Tibet, many locals' first choice for their children's education is sending them to special classes for Tibetans in other provinces' schools. If a child passes the entrance test and makes it into one of these classes, the family will feel honored and proud.

Their second choice would be one of Tibet's more prestigious schools. Lhasa No.2 Middle School, where Zhang was assigned, is not regarded as a prestigious school.

On top of that, Zhang found that compared with Beijing, Lhasa lags behind in both teaching methods and resources.

"In this region, teachers can apply to retire early because of health issues. It's easy to develop illnesses due to the high altitude. So some teachers retire as early as 50, which is the age they have the most experience. In Beijing, we consider that the golden age to teach," Zhang said.

While at the school, Zhang tried to spread his knowledge of advanced teaching methods. He boosted teachers' training, hired experts to help them and organized seminars for teachers to discuss their work.

"We are happy to see some changes in Tibet at least. In the old days, it used to be the teachers going around hunting down students from their homes to come to school, but now the parents are consciously making their children get a good education, that's encouraging," he said. He said helping the children to obtain an education is the first step to turning them away from separatist propaganda.

During his term, Li took 12 villagers to Beijing and Tianjin to see China's richest regions.

"Many of them had never even been outside the village in their entire lives, they had never taken an elevator, ridden an airplane or stayed in a hotel before," he said.


So he took them to see Tianjin harbor, the Great Wall and the Bird's Nest stadium, hoping that the trip would expand their minds and encourage them to be more ambitious about their children's future.


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A worker surnamed Wang assigned to Lhasa works in his office while wearing an oxygen mask. Photo: Li Hao/GT

Awards and repercussion

Many taking part in the program found it difficult to adapt to life high on the Tibetan plateau.

One major problem is the scarcity of oxygen in Tibet due to its high altitude. In order to cope with this problem, many have developed creative solutions.

Li said he developed a new way of breathing, in which he took deep breaths to increase his blood oxygen level. He also installed oxygen masks in his car and used them whenever he would take a drive.

The village he was stationed in is situated 600 kilometers from Lhasa and it takes an entire day on the road to get there from the regional capital. To get there, one must take the bus, then switch to motorcycles or carts. The remote village doesn't have modern conveniences, such as electricity or running water, due to it sitting at an altitude of over 4,000 meters and often experiencing extreme weather. Locals use a generator for a few hours of power a day and only do laundry once every couple of weeks.

When Li was stationed there, he had to put up with stinky clothes. He didn't throw away any food, even when it grew moldy, because fresh supplies couldn't be carried to the village. His nails became black with dirt and his skin toughened because of the gales that blow through the village. But he felt that he had experienced the "real" Tibet, and that his work in the villages had real meaning.

A worker from Beijing assigned to Lhasa who gave his surname as Wang said he has been in Tibet for only a year, but he has felt its influence on him. He works in the office which coordinates officials sent to Tibet.

"The first few months when I was here, I couldn't even sleep well," he said.

When he works at home, he relies heavily on an oxygen generator. He even made changes to the machine, attaching a longer tube so he could wear the mask in bed and keep inhaling pure oxygen even as he sleeps.

After a few months, Wang found he had developed health problems, with issues in his lungs and livers. He said he has also talked with others, and most have some kind of problem after being posted there. Some even worry that their organs would get larger due to the scarcity of oxygen.


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Aid drawbacks

Some have criticized the system. First of all, some of the projects are not well-suited to locals' needs, especially farmers and herdsmen, who live in poverty-stricken areas that require the most aid.

In 1995-2007, Suzhou, East China's Jiangsu Province aided Linzhou township in Lhasa and helped it build schools, hospitals, training centers and markets. But the project also included building squares and statues in some villages. To Tibetan herdsmen and farmers, squares are of little use.

Another problem is workers and officials are only sent to Tibet for a few years at a time.

A local Tibetan official told media, "It really affects the job here. They need to get used to the weather in their first year, they can do something solid in their second year, but they'll be gone the next year."

Because of this system, some Tibet-aiding officials are called "migrating birds."


Therefore, locals need to be involved in these projects.

A successful example is a water pipe installed in a town in Xigaze. The decisions about where the pipe should go and what materials should be used were made collectively by the village, rather than solely by officials. Some villagers were given maintenance training and the pipe is still in use six years later.

This is in stark comparison to another water pipe in a different town. It was paid for by the central government and a team from another province came to set it up. But in the winter, it cracked due to the cold weather and none of the locals knew how to fix it.

"Aiding Tibet shouldn't be all about just using up the designated funds given by the government and finishing what one is 'required' to do in each term," Xiao Huaxin, Party chief of Longyan, Fujian Province, who was also an aid official to Tibet, told the China Youth Daily.
 
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