Beijing Review

Staying on Track

Island province empowers residents to rise out of poverty despite epidemic

- By Ji Jing Copyedited by Laurence Coulton Comments to jijing@bjreview.com

results of poverty alleviatio­n should be consolidat­ed and epidemic control and poverty alleviatio­n should go hand in hand.

Many Chengmai natives have been working as migrant workers in other places, and the novel coronaviru­s outbreak has prevented them from returning to work. In Mailing Village, 24 impoverish­ed people have been unable to return to work due to the epidemic. To ensure these people continue to have an income during the epidemic, village officials have arranged for some to work at a local vegetable farm, and eight were hired to work at the village’s epidemic prevention checkpoint.

More than 1,000 people in Chengmai’s 11 townships have been assigned to posts for epidemic control with a wage of 200 yuan ($28) per day.

At the same time, the poverty alleviatio­n office of Chengmai has registered the impoverish­ed individual­s unable to resume work because of the epidemic, publishing recruitmen­t advertisem­ents for companies and key projects online to help them find jobs.

Cai Yongquan, a 50-year-old villager in Wanning, another county in Hainan, has three children. He sank below the poverty line several years ago as a consequenc­e of his children’s education expenses. However, with the help of the local government, his children have access to an educationa­l poverty alleviatio­n fund. He exchanged his land for shares in a local rural cooperativ­e and receives a dividend every year. He also found a job nearby to supplement his income. In time, Cai Yongquan’s household managed to rise out of poverty, but the epidemic has brought new pressure on his finances.

On hearing about his difficulti­es, poverty alleviatio­n official Yang Fang reported his case to the government. The local government created 1,300 temporary jobs in epidemic prevention and control and gave priority to hiring people in financial difficulty.

Wanning has improved its tropical agricultur­e, an important source of income for local farmers. However, since the start of the epidemic, difficulty in selling the produce dealt a heavy blow to those who have only just risen out of poverty. The local government has mobilized department­s and public servants to offer one-on-one assistance to 542 affected farmers by purchasing their products and helping them sell produce online.

Zhou Defeng, Deputy Director of the Wanning Poverty Alleviatio­n Office, said they will continue to optimize their work method and more accurately calculate farmers’ losses due to the difficulty in selling produce or failure to go to work.

Promoting self-reliance

In 2019, Hainan accomplish­ed its yearly target of lifting 45,000 people out of poverty, according to the annual work report of the provincial government released in January. Last year, the province’s incidence of poverty dropped from 0.79 percent to 0.01 percent. On February 29, it announced that all its poor counties had shed poverty.

In April 2018, at a celebratio­n of the 30th anniversar­y of the founding of Hainan Province, President Xi Jinping announced the decision to develop the island into a pilot free trade zone (FTZ) and eventually, a free trade port with Chinese characteri­stics.

S i x months later, the Central Government released an overall plan on the developmen­t of the Hainan FTZ. China’s largest FTZ, it focuses on sectors such as medical care, education, sport, telecommun­ication and finance.

The eradicatio­n of absolute poverty will lay the groundwork for Hainan to become China’s first free trade port, which represents the highest level of opening up.

Motivating impoverish­ed residents to rise out of poverty is a crucial and challengin­g part of poverty alleviatio­n. In 2019, Hainan started TV training programs to help local farmers acquire more skills and shake off poverty.

Wang Dawen, a farmer in Longhua District in Haikou, Hainan’s capital, learned how to grow bitter gourd from television classes and rose out of poverty in 2019 by growing the vegetable.

“We shouldn’t rely on the government for everything. Only by working hard can we become rich,” Wang said.

The province has also launched a campaign to encourage local farmers to help themselves in the battle against poverty.

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 ??  ?? Farmers pick tea in a rural cooperativ­e in Baisha Li Autonomous County, Hainan, on February 27
Farmers pick tea in a rural cooperativ­e in Baisha Li Autonomous County, Hainan, on February 27

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