Smelly village undergoes transformation
EVERY year when summer came, Wang Qingli shut all his doors and windows and sprayed insecticide all over his house.
“The smell was just disgusting, and the mosquitoes and flies were appalling,” Wang said. “Whenever the south wind blew, nobody in the village opened their doors.”
Wang, 62, lives in Liujiamatou Village in north China’s Tianjin City. The 133-hectare village once hosted more than 3,000 migrant workers who converged there to recycle garbage.
Now locals like Wang are bidding farewell to their smelly lifestyle as the government begins cleaning up the area. Trees have replaced trash and a ski resort has been built.
In the 1990s, garbage from downtown Tianjin was taken to Liujiamatou where villagers quickly realized that it could be used to feed pigs, giving rise to a number of piggeries in the village.
People began to collect garbage from restaurants and bring it to the village, which contributed to the growth of the industry, and the commensurate growth of the local stench.
“In 1995, most of us were raising pigs,” Wang recalled. While the industry brought plenty of benefits to locals, it also made the vicinity smell “really bad.”
As job seekers flooded into Tianjin, the villagers began to rent out their extra land to migrant workers who sifted through the waste for things that could be sold or recycled, like clothes and domestic appliances.
Aware of the damage caused by recycling and pig-raising, the local government has cleaned up the village. In 2015, Qingguang Township, which administers the village, cleared more than 140 hectares of land, and disposed of more than 1,600 recycling stations. Trees were planted.
Last year, police intercepted garbage trucks and the land once rented out to migrant workers was transferred to the government for planting.