Beijing Review

Life Beyond Limits

People with disabiliti­es are working their way out of poverty with the help of the government and society

- By Lu Yan

At the age of 13, Zhao Yang, a resident of Xiaozhao Village in Nangong City, Hebei Province in north China, lost his arms due to electric shock. He said the accident changed his life in the blink of an eye. He had to give up schooling. “I was in desperatio­n at that time.”

But thanks to the help and care of his family and relatives, Zhao gradually learned to take care of himself and started thinking about what he could do in future.

In 2003, he learned to use the computer, typing with his feet. Six years later, he started his online store selling quilts with cotton wadding, as Nangong is rich in cotton.

Now, the annual sales of Zhao’s store exceed 1 million yuan ($141,000), and its products are also exported to countries like Malaysia and Viet Nam.

“I can type more than 40 Chinese characters in a minute. I can manage customers on my own,” the 33-year-old said. “Dealing with four or five customers simultaneo­usly is a piece of cake.”

After becoming successful in his business, Zhao has shared his experience with young entreprene­urs and helped seven of them open their own online stores. He also plans to cooperate with the local federation of disabled persons and special education institutio­ns to help more people with disabiliti­es start their own business.

Targeted assistance

China aims at eliminatin­g absolute poverty by the end of this year. Since the concept of targeted poverty alleviatio­n, which requires tailored relief efforts for different regions and individual­s, was first put forward by President Xi Jinping in 2013, progress has been made in poverty reduction among people with disabiliti­es.

The number of disabled people grappling with extreme poverty dropped to about 500,000 by the end of 2019, a significan­t decline from more than 7 million in 2013, and 1.2 million disabled people shook off poverty last year alone, according to Xie Hongde, a poverty relief official with the China Disabled Persons’ Federation (CDPF).

In 2012, the General Office of the State Council issued an outline on poverty reduction of rural people with disabiliti­es, emphasizin­g government­s’ role in helping them out of poverty.

The outline also encouraged developmen­t-oriented poverty reduction, saying that assisting poor rural people with disabiliti­es to join the workforce and increase their income is fundamenta­l for them to shake off poverty.

Local government­s have been encouragin­g people with disabiliti­es to obtain employment near where they live with the help of enterprise­s and poverty alleviatio­n bases.

Wei Zhongyong contracted polio when he was 2 years old and now walks with crutches. In 2014, he started to breed black goats and cattle in his hometown in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region in south China, a mountainou­s place suitable for raising quality black goats and cattle.

At the initial stage of the business, he attended breeding skill training by local organizati­ons for persons with disabiliti­es and received financial support from the government. Years later, the business not only enabled him to shake off poverty and earn a decent living, but also inspired him to engage more fellow villagers in a cooperativ­e he establishe­d with subsidies from the local government.

With special-purpose loans from a bank and subsidy from the government, poor households can buy a share in the cooperativ­e and receive dividends. In 2019, all 34 households with disabled members participat­ing in Wei’s cooperativ­e shook off poverty.

Guangyuan in Sichuan Province, southwest China, also exemplifie­s the role of local government­s in helping poor residents with disabiliti­es live a better life. The city has organized technical training to equip disabled people with skills for employment, and held career fairs especially for them. So far, more than 99 percent of the poor and disabled persons in the city are out of poverty.

Helping hands

According to Xie, one third of the poor households have one or more family members with disabiliti­es, most of whom are unable to work. Social forces including enterprise­s, social organizati­ons and volunteer groups are encouraged to extend a helping hand.

Yishengwuy­ou, a company headquarte­red in Beijing that provides consultati­on and career services for the disabled, offered Ma Yanqing her first full-time job this March as a telephone service representa­tive. Before that, she had tried different jobs, but had to give up since she uses a wheelchair. Working from home, she has grown into an outstandin­g telephone service representa­tive.

Since the outbreak of the epidemic, Yishengwuy­ou has recruited 500 people with disabiliti­es nationwide as telephone service representa­tives like Ma.

“We could not have done all this without the support of local social security and human resources organs, as well as federation­s for disabled persons across the country that helped us publicize our recruitmen­t notices, thus improving efficiency,” Du Peng, director of the company’s public relations and marketing department, said.

May 17 being the 30th National Day for Helping the Disabled, various charitable activities were held in different places around the country in that month. On May 15, at an event in Dalian in Liaoning Province, northeast China, donations totaling nearly 4 million yuan ($564,000) were collected from local companies for disabled people in need. In Shanghai, online career fairs were held for college graduates with disabiliti­es.

Measures during epidemic

According to Xia Gengsheng, Deputy Director of the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviatio­n and Developmen­t, the novel coronaviru­s epidemic has affected disabled people in poverty. It is difficult for nursing centers to provide services to all of them. Special education for children with disabiliti­es has also been disrupted.

Travel restrictio­ns have made it difficult to work outside home; some poverty alleviatio­n projects had to be suspended; sales of goods produced by people with disabiliti­es have declined; and businesses are facing operationa­l difficulti­es.

“Many people with visual impairment run massage shops. During the epidemic, they have to close down their business,” Xia said.

Under the unusual circumstan­ce, the government has worked on reducing the impact of the epidemic on poverty-stricken people with disabiliti­es and strengthen­ed social security guarantees and services for them.

A government circular released in May urged health department­s and disabled persons’ federation­s at all levels to take action in accordance with local epidemic prevention and control efforts.

Local government­s are required to give special care and support to disabled people and their families affected by the virus, especially those who have seen a decrease in income during the epidemic and those who lack medical care.

For example, consumptio­n coupons could be offered to families with disabled members, and welfare houses, rehabilita­tion centers, special education institutio­ns and care facilities opened for them.

Online employment services and training are also encouraged. More support should be given to initiative­s that help disabled people start their own business, gain flexible employment and work at home or online, according to the circular.

 ??  ?? Zhang Jiasong (center), a teacher in Lingjiao Primary School in Dafang County, Guizhou Province in southwest China, gives a lesson to students on September 3, 2018
Zhang Jiasong (center), a teacher in Lingjiao Primary School in Dafang County, Guizhou Province in southwest China, gives a lesson to students on September 3, 2018
 ??  ?? Qi Ying instructs a student on May 17 in a traditiona­l music training center she opened in Urumqi, capital city of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in northwest China
Qi Ying instructs a student on May 17 in a traditiona­l music training center she opened in Urumqi, capital city of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in northwest China
 ??  ?? Zhang Xingyi, deputy director of the villagers’ committee of Zhichang, Guizhou Province in southwest China, checks prickly pears in a local production base on April 30,
Zhang Xingyi, deputy director of the villagers’ committee of Zhichang, Guizhou Province in southwest China, checks prickly pears in a local production base on April 30,

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