Beijing Review

A PIECE OF THE PUZZLE

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Luo Shugang (right), Minister of Culture and Tourism, and Pansy Ho Chiu-king, daughter and representa­tive of Macao-based tycoon and collector Stanley Ho Hung-sun, unveil a red bronze horse-head statue at the National Museum of China in Beijing on November 13.

Stanley Ho decided to donate the horse head statue to the National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion on the same day to mark the 70th anniversar­y of the founding of the People’s Republic of China and the 20th anniversar­y of Macao’s return to China.

The statue, one of 12 decorative Chinese zodiac signs, was located in the former imperial resort of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) Yuanmingyu­an. Also known as the Old Summer Palace, Yuanmingyu­an was built in 1707 in northweste­rn Beijing and often referred to as “the garden of gardens” for its lush landscapes and numerous temples, palaces and pavilions.

The 12 animal heads were looted by invading Anglo-french Alliance forces that rampaged through Yuanmingyu­an and set it on fire in 1860. As of now, seven of the 12 heads have been returned to China through various means.

Per-capita net operating revenue in impoverish­ed areas climbed 6.8 percent, expanding 1.3 percentage points faster than a year earlier, with the income from the tertiary industry registerin­g a yearly growth of 11.2 percent.

Income from the agricultur­al sector rose 3.8 percent year on year, bucking the trend of a 3.9-percent drop from last year, thanks to expanded summer grain output and a price increase in animal husbandry products.

Farmers’ per-capita income from the government climbed 15.3 percent year on year, including pensions, social relief, agricultur­e subsidies and living allowances.

The country is aiming to lift all rural residents living below the current poverty line out of poverty and eliminate poverty in all county-level regions by 2020.

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