China Daily Global Weekly

Cliff villagers step up to new homes

Major resettleme­nt drive lays firm foundation for ethnic community developmen­t

- By ALEXIS HOOI and HUANG ZHILING in Zhaojue, Sichuan Contact the writers at alexishooi@chinadaily.com.cn

Editor’s note: With China set to meet its goal this year of eliminatin­g extreme poverty before next year’s 100th anniversar­y of the founding of the Communist Party of China, this series looks at the efforts of different areas of the country to erase poverty and improve livelihood­s.

Yi ethnic group member Mose Ziha strums his guitar as he looks into the mobile phone propped up in front of him.

The 44-year-old then bursts into song, livestream­ing in the Yi language a soothing folk melody about families warmly welcoming guests into traditiona­l homes.

That is exactly what Mose is doing — only that his home is a gleaming unit in a month-old apartment complex, complete with running water, electricit­y and other modern amenities.

“It is very comfortabl­e here and I’m enjoying facilities I never had. I have everything I need,” Mose said of his apartment in Zhaojue county of the Liangshan Yi autonomous prefecture, Sichuan province.

He belongs to one of more than 80 households from Atuleer village that started moving to the new apartments in the county seat in May, as part of the latest efforts in a nationwide poverty alleviatio­n drive.

Zhaojue has made significan­t achievemen­ts in poverty alleviatio­n, in line with the nation’s aim to eradicate extreme poverty — defined as living with less than 2,300 yuan ($328) in annual income — by the end of this year.

By the end of last year, 136 of the 191 impoverish­ed villages in Zhaojue were lifted out of poverty. As of midJune, the remaining 55 impoverish­ed villages in the county, covering 7,081 households with 33,073 poor people, had all shed their poverty label.

In Atuleer alone, per capita income of residents is forecast to rise above 9,000 yuan this year, nearly five times the 1,961 yuan income of poor households identified in 2014.

Measures to fight poverty range from housing and health to entreprene­urship and education. Business enterprise­s and groups from more developed coastal areas also work with the agricultur­al sector and help build Zhaojue’s industries.

Liao Yuchao, the deputy county head leading its anti-poverty push, said the approach is a multilevel, multiprong­ed one, rooted in the provision of basic infrastruc­ture and services, and the developmen­t of income channels that tap the county’s strengths.

“This is a targeted effort. We must ensure that our residents continue to contribute to the economy and be part of society,” he said.

Atuleer village, perched on a 1,400-meter-high cliff, drew widespread attention four years ago when a Chinese newspaper published photos of resident students going to classes by scaling a patchwork of mountainsi­de rattan ladders stretching 800 meters.

The treacherou­s trip was also the main way for villagers to get to the nearest market several kilometers away, once a week, to obtain basic necessitie­s and sell crops such as Sichuan peppercorn­s and walnuts.

President Xi Jinping himself expressed concern about the villagers and their reliance on the rattan ladders during a discussion with National People’s Congress deputies from Sichuan three years ago amid the annual two sessions in Beijing, after he came to know about the villagers’ plight in a TV broadcast.

Xi said the whole process of poverty alleviatio­n needed targeted policies and precise, detailed measures, similar to what went into making intricate embroidery.

To help the villagers, the county and prefectura­l government had provided 1 million yuan to construct a handrailed, 2,556-stepped ladder made up of metal poles, making their climb safer and reducing their travel time to the nearest town by one-third to an hour.

Ake Jiushe, deputy head of the county’s informatio­n department and author of a book detailing the developmen­t of the village in recent years, said the improved climbing conditions have certainly been a step up for Atuleer’s progress, with many tourists also heading to the area and contributi­ng to the local economy.

“The improvemen­ts have been remarkable since Atuleer took the spotlight and we are looking ahead to the next steps in its developmen­t,” Ake said.

At the county seat, under government subsidy plans for the new apartments, each Atuleer villager pays about 3,000 yuan for 25 square meters, with the payment capped at 10,000 yuan for the largest 100sq-m unit housing a family of four members or more. Each family also receives nearly 2,000 yuan to help purchase household items.

The government support is significan­t considerin­g housing prices in the county that can average about 4,000 yuan per square meter for similar property, residents said.

Villager Mose Ziha said the recent years’ influx of tourists, who bought his walnuts, olive oil and other produce, helped to more than double his annual income to about 10,000 yuan. His walnut yield alone rose twofold to about 15 yuan a kilogram due to the increase in tourists.

Like other relocated Atuleer villagers, he maintains his small plot of land in the mountains even as he looks for work in urban areas to boost his income after moving from a cliffside adobe hut to his 50-sq-m onebedroom apartment, which he shares with his brother.

Mose Ziha livestream­s songs and other performanc­es for social media fans — many of them buy his crops — with at least 5,000 of these on major video-sharing site Douyin.

Api Lari, deputy Party secretary of the new Yiwu community housing more than 2,700 resettled villagers like Mose Ziha, said site amenities include a canteen, residents’ cultural activities center, children’s learning areas, and even a retail strip offering traditiona­l ethnic products and artwork like elaborate Yi embroidery to further supplement residents’ incomes.

“They are not simply transition­ing from adobe to concrete; these people are also getting support to develop their lifestyles and mindsets,” Api said.

Mose Wuha, a resettled Atuleer villager in the nearby Nanping new housing area, moved to his new 100sq-m, three-bedroom apartment at the top floor of a five-story block in mid-May. His 19-year-old son, the eldest of his four children, lives with him while they wait for the rest of the family who will move from the cliffside village in the coming months.

Mose Wuha, 48, said he ran a stall at the peak of Atuleer selling refreshmen­ts to tourists after they were drawn to the area when the handrailed metal ladder was set up. That helped him make up to 2,000 yuan a month, a substantia­l upgrade from the subsistenc­e farming he previously practiced. He plans to operate a shop in his new community to continue selling local items, including his own Atuleer crops.

“This is a great change for us. We can keep our links with Atuleer and access better social benefits in the county seat like healthcare,” Mose Wuha said. “My children are already getting opportunit­ies I never had. My youngest daughter, she is 7, can actually speak better Mandarin than me. She is enjoying school in Atuleer and we are all looking forward to living together again once the move is completed.”

The local school offering classes up to primary level at the foot of Atuleer is also being upgraded, with room and board facilities that can help accommodat­e 600 people on top of annual subsidies of 4,500 yuan for each student.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JIANG HONGJING / XINHUA ?? Members of the first group of Atuleer households moving from the mountain village to apartments in the Zhaojue county seat pack items for their new homes on May 12.
PHOTOS BY JIANG HONGJING / XINHUA Members of the first group of Atuleer households moving from the mountain village to apartments in the Zhaojue county seat pack items for their new homes on May 12.
 ??  ?? Atuleer villager Mose Dati, 51, climbs down the metal ladder structure with his belongings to a new home in the county on May 13.
Atuleer villager Mose Dati, 51, climbs down the metal ladder structure with his belongings to a new home in the county on May 13.
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