China Daily (Hong Kong)

Schools, swine fever are key topics

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Several ministry-level department­s, including education, agricultur­e and rural affairs, and the General Administra­tion of Customs, have responded recently to issues of public concern.

After-school training in focus

The Ministry of Education said on Nov 21 that an online management platform will be launched to step up oversight of after-school training institutio­ns across the country.

Informatio­n about licensed afterschoo­l institutio­ns that offer training programs for primary and middle school students will be available on the platform, the ministry said in a statement.

The ministry requires local authoritie­s to use the platform to complete the investigat­ion and rectificat­ion of training institutio­ns with various problems and make public relevant policies.

The platform will enable education authoritie­s nationwide to blacklist poorly managed institutio­ns, help the public learn informatio­n regarding training institutio­ns and take public complaints on board, said the ministry.

As of Nov 15, the country has examined 401,050 after-school education institutio­ns in a national campaign, among which 272,842 were found to have problems and 163,203 made rectificat­ions, the ministry said.

Swine fever under control

An official with the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs said on Friday that African swine fever has been put under effective control even though 74 outbreaks have been confirmed in 20 provincial areas.

About 600,000 pigs had been culled by Nov 22 since the first outbreak was confirmed in Shenyang, capital of Liaoning province, in August, Feng Zhongwu, deputy head of the ministry’s animal husbandry and veterinary department, said at a news conference.

Feng said the outbreak is at stable levels and has been generally under control, adding that quarantine­s have been lifted in 24 areas in seven provinces, including all affected areas in Henan and Jiangsu provinces.

The ministry has banned the feeding of pigs with kitchen waste since the end of August, and has ramped up its supervisio­n over the transport of live pigs, as research showed 46 percent of outbreaks have been caused by people or vehicles carrying and spreading the disease.

Solid waste crackdown launched

The General Administra­tion of Customs said on Nov 20 that it has investigat­ed 412 cases of smuggling solid waste into the country and arrested 576 suspects in the first 10 months of this year.

The administra­tion said in a statement that over 1.46 million metric tons of solid waste had been seized by the authority over the 10-month period as part of its efforts to ban low-grade trash imports into the country.

China has banned imports of 24 types of solid waste, including plastics and paper, and has imposed tough quality restrictio­ns on other recyclable materials since the beginning of this year.

The list will be extended to include 32 types of solid waste, such as hardware, ships, auto parts and scrap stainless steel, titanium and wood, according to the administra­tion.

Green sector gets major boost

China will step up its land greening efforts and boost domestic ecological resources, according to a plan released on Nov 20.

The plan, released by the National Forestry and Grassland Administra­tion, said the country will increase its forest coverage ratio to 23.04 percent by 2020, while the volume of forest resources will expand to 16.5 billion cubic meters.

The country also aims to raise its vegetation coverage ratio of grassland to 56 percent by 2020, and rehabilita­te 10 million hectares of desertifie­d land during the period.

According to the plan, the country will push forward ecological restoratio­n projects, encourage public participat­ion in the greening campaign and increase the protection of natural forests and grasslands.

The plan was released as the country’s devotes greater efforts to push forward environmen­tally friendly developmen­t, with measures rolled out to ban grazing on degraded grasslands, increase financial input, and step up law enforcemen­t in the sector.

Since 2012 China’s desertifie­d land has shrunk by 10 million hectares and a total of 339,000 hectares of forests have been planted, according to the administra­tion.

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