China Daily (Hong Kong)

Xi inspires villagers to protect river headwaters

- By LI YINGXUE liyingxue@chinadaily.com.cn

More than 3,000 Tibetan antelopes stopped under the shadow of the Wudaoliang North Bridge on the QinghaiTib­et Railway. After a few hesitant minutes, the antelopes passed through the shadow to continue their migratory journey.

The scene was observed in real time by Li Hongqi on his computer through a high-definition monitoring system as he sat in his office in Xining, Qinghai province, on the morning of Aug 8.

“We know the Tibetan antelopes will come in July and leave in August on certain dates, but this was the largest single group we saw through the monitoring system,” said Li, head of the Qinghai Environmen­tal Informatio­n Center.

A year earlier, he had shown President Xi Jinping the same system, with live views of the source of the Yellow River, the Wudaoliang bridge and other locations that the environmen­tal informatio­n center monitors.

Xi visited Qinghai province on Aug 23 and 24 of last year and talked with grassroots cadres and environmen­tal protection officials at two ecological monitoring sites via video from the informatio­n center.

Xi emphasized the importance of protecting the environmen­t of the source region of three great rivers — the Yangtze, Yellow and Lancang — and asked the environmen­tal protection controller­s to fulfill their duties to safeAugust, guard the lakes, grasslands, rivers, wild animals and other ecological resources of the province.

Tashi Tsering, one of the controller­s, lives in the village of Changjiang­yuan and drives more than 1,000 kilometers on each of the trips he makes to patrol his jurisdicti­on near the Tuotuo River. He carries tents and food for the trip, which usually takes three days.

It rained heavily on the day he started his patrol in and the rain made the roads difficult to use in the rural area. Tsering had to rent a motorbike.

“I became an environmen­tal protection controller in 2013. The grass this year has grown the finest and the weather has been great,” said Tsering, a former shepherd.

In 2004, more than 400 shepherds including Tsering moved down from the area around the sources of the three rivers at an altitude of about 4,700 meters above sea level to the southern suburb of Golmud and formed the new village of Changjiang­yuan.

Gega Namgyee, deputy secretary of the village, explained his reason for the move.

“We need to support the protection of the three-river source because it’s our home. We need to protect the environmen­t like our own lives.

“I believe in the Chinese Communist Party, so I followed its lead.”

In 2016, Xi visited Changjiang­yuan and asked the villagers about their life after they moved down from the mountains. Learning that the villagers had stable incomes, basic health insurance and old-age insurance, Xi was delighted and said, “A better life for you lies ahead.”

While their previous annual income was less than 2,000 yuan ($300), each villager now earns more than 20,000 yuan, Gega Namgyee said.

“The day President Xi visited our village was the most unforgetta­ble and happiest day of my life,” he said.

“It’s been a year since his visit and our village is getting better with all the electric wires moving undergroun­d.”

Tsering is paid 1,800 yuan a month as an environmen­tal protection controller, plus can do part-time work between patrols.

Married this year, the 38-year-old is expecting his first child in October.

Tsering was among the first group of environmen­tal protection controller­s in Changjiang­yuan. But all villagers are aware of the need to protect the environmen­t. They clean the village together on certain days every month.

Tsering’s niece Paima Ga, 15, moved to the village when she was 3. She takes part in the cleaning duties. Her father is an environmen­tal protection controller like her

uncle. When her father is away for a few days, she knows he has gone to check the grasslands.

Each summer vacation, Paima Ga returns to the Tuotuo River area to watch traditiona­l horse races.

“The grass now is better than before,” she said.

Studying at Golmud Ethnic middle school, Paima Ga has

adapted to a semiurban life.

“I like living here. I can make many friends, eat many vegetables and go shopping.”

Paima Ga wants to study filmmaking.

“I want to be a director in the future,” she said. “I can film the legends of the Tibetan ethic group and record the beautiful natural scenery of my hometown.”

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