Global Times

Poverty campaign targets ethnic minority regions

- By Chen Qingqing in Linxia

Ethnic minority areas have been a major focus of China’s nationwide poverty alleviatio­n campaign in the past five years.

A lack of education, resources and infrastruc­ture has prevented these largely remote regions from connecting with the outside world. Local people’s needs are also diverse.

One villager told the Global Times he wanted to retain the mud wall of his old house in Northwest China’s Gansu Province.

“I didn’t let them

renovate the wall last year, as one day it might be the only memory left of our village,” said the 67-year-old man, who only gave his surname as Huang.

Maba village, where Huang lives, is surrounded by mountains and a few scattered Kangle county towns that form the Linxia Hui Autonomous Prefecture, one of the poorest regions in China.

In 2011, about 900,200 people lived below the national poverty line in Linxia, or more than half the population.

That figure plunged to 298,400 at the end of 2016, according to the autonomous prefecture government.

“The battle has been tough, as it has always been in regions where ethnic minorities live,” a Linxia official surnamed Wang told the Global Times. Wang asked not to be fully named.

The ethnic minority group accounts for 59 percent of Linxia’s 2.19 million people, making the region a high priority target for the provincial poverty alleviatio­n campaign.

Many Linxia villages are stuck in the earliest stages of agricultur­al developmen­t and have a tough road ahead reaching the target of a well-off society by 2020, Wang said.

But the bright side is “we began to make changes,” he said.

Villagers living in poverty are learning how to make ends meet while growing their own agricultur­al businesses.

“Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day but teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime,” he said.

Tough road

All over China, there has been a war on poverty over the last two decades.

Some 12.4 million rural people were lifted out of poverty in 2016, the Xinhua News Agency reported, citing the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviatio­n and Developmen­t.

But ethnic minority areas often remain entangled in poverty, Xinhua said, citing an ethnic minority poverty alleviatio­n report published in March.

Poor people living in ethnic minority areas increased from 30.4 percent of the total population in 2011 to 32.6 percent in 2016, the report noted.

Ethnic minority regions are considered the key battlegrou­nd for poverty alleviatio­n efforts.

Maba, for example, has received 11 million yuan ($1.67 million) from central and local government­s in the last three years.

“The first thing we did after we received poverty alleviatio­n funding was to build a road,” said Bai Shaoyun, Party chief of Shangwan township, which administer­s Maba.

Thanks to poverty alleviatio­n funding, the road to the outside world is already finished for the village of Yanzi in neighborin­g Guanghe county, where residents are 90 percent Hui.

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