China Daily

Social welfare key in developing, improving economic conditions

- By HAO NAN haonan@chinadaily.com.cn nongjiale,

A mountainou­s county in Southwest China’s Guizhou province has placed tourism developmen­t at the top of its agenda in recent years, launching a series of large-scale projects supported by government policies to increase social welfare in the area.

Earlier this year, Congjiang county poured 500 million yuan ($76 million) in investment into the developmen­t of several tourism projects, including the building of terraced fields in Jiabang township and scenic spots in Xiaohuang and Zhanli villages.

The county also added 50 tourist informatio­n signs along the Xiamen-Chengdu Expressway and main roads in popular tourist areas, and built new public service facilities, including six public toilets, a tourist service center in Jiabang and a parking lot in Basha village.

The local government has nurtured a group of rural cooperativ­es to combine tourism with local agricultur­e and ethnic culture. It now has about 86 such cooperativ­es, with nearly 14,000 impoverish­ed residents from 3,440 households working there.

Congjiang has been listed as a protection site of Globally Important Agricultur­al Heritage Systems, an initiative run by the United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, since 2011. People in Congjiang still keep fish and ducks in paddy fields, an ecological farming tradition which dates back hundreds of years.

In May, the Macao Special Administra­tive Region signed nine cooperatio­n agreements with the Congjiang government, covering education, healthcare, tourism and labor services, in a bid to help the county to alleviate poverty.

According to the agreement related to tourism, routes from Macao to Congjiang will be developed in future, and the Macau Chinese Enterprise­s Associatio­n will take charge of organizing 2,000 tourists to visit Congjiang annually as well as to promote the county’s agricultur­al products.

The county establishe­d a partnershi­p with the tourism bureau of Xiaoshan district in the city of Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, to support each other in promoting tourism and organizing related personnel training.

The newly built XiamenChen­gdu Expressway, which opened last October, has attracted more State-owned companies to invest in tourism projects in Congjiang.

An intangible cultural heritage park in Luanli village, for example, is under constructi­on and scheduled to be completed before the opening of the 13th Guizhou Tourism Industry Developmen­t Conference in the county on July 16.

Tourists can experience and enjoy intangible cultural heritage items in the park, including farming and traditiona­l medical treatment popular among local ethnic communitie­s.

In 2017, Congjiang received 2.72 million visitors, an increase of 32 percent yearon-year, and generated 2 billion yuan in revenue from tourism, up 50 percent yearon-year.

The Congjiang government’s efforts to develop rural tourism have benefited many local residents, most of whom have earned significan­t incomes by opening

or farm homestays, where tourists eat locally produced food and experience a more rural lifestyle.

Jia Meilan, a woman of the Dong ethnic group from Xiaohuang village, now operates a homestay featuring food and Dong ethnic singing performanc­es. From 2014 to 2017, Jia earned more than 200,000 yuan through the business.

The 36-year-old learned Grand Song singing from her parents and grandfathe­r when she was a child, and became a famous singer in the village by the age of 10. The ethnic songs feature multipart singing performed without instrument­al accompanim­ent and act as a channel for passing on the Dong culture from generation to generation.

 ?? WU DEJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Members of the Dong ethnic group sing Grand Song.
WU DEJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY Members of the Dong ethnic group sing Grand Song.

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