China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Guizhou’s Bijie boosted by rural tourism

City famed for its sea of azaleas fosters industry to lift incomes

- By YANG JUN in Bijie, Guizhou, and LI YANG in Beijing Contact the writers at liyang@chinadaily.com.cn

Named for its sea of azalea flowers, the Baili Azalea Administra­tive Zone, comprising 68 villages across some 700 square kilometers of hilly land in Bijie, Guizhou province, is an experiment­al zone in a core poverty alleviatio­n area.

The zone has struck a balance between ecological preservati­on and economic growth by boosting sightseein­g and cultural experience tourism.

Rural tourism has created 46,000 jobs for residents, most of whom would otherwise work far from home as migrant laborers, according to the local government.

Last year, tourists from home and abroad made 798,000 visits to the zone — which has 16 characteri­stic villages, more than 20 scenic spots, 391 restaurant­s and homestays and 6,700 beds for travelers — generating revenue of 585 million yuan ($84.3 million) and helping increase average household income by 10,600 yuan a year.

The zone’s administra­tive committee is working with travel companies and farming cooperativ­es to manage tourism resources.

The committee focuses on improving infrastruc­ture facilities and public services, while the companies and cooperativ­es run and promote scenic spots.

All stakeholde­rs have attached great importance to raising environmen­tal awareness and encouragin­g residents to protect the local ecology.

Companies and cooperativ­es evaluate and rate the zone’s restaurant­s and homestays in terms of their facilities, management and services, pushing businesses to rectify any problems.

Farmers have also planted about 3,000 hectares of flowers, fruits, mushrooms, herbs and other plants that are more profitable than corn, which locals have grown for generation­s, and have created packages for tourists to experience the planting and harvest seasons firsthand.

The city government has resettled poor residents from remote, high-altitude areas to the foot of the mountains, where transporta­tion is more convenient.

“The living environmen­t is much better. I didn’t expect that my family could move into a new three-story house, equipped with running water and electricit­y, without paying a thing,” said Zhao Anyou, one of 116 people relocated from Yuanyan village to government-subsidized homes in the town of Pudi.

Cooperativ­es organize at least five training sessions a year for farmers like Zhao, to equip them with the skills they need for their new lifestyles, and are constantly improving management and services.

Xiao Tianyao, 92, from Luzhou, Sichuan province, stayed with her daughter in the Baili zone from more than a month over the summer. She told Bijie Daily, “I didn’t anticipate finding a perfect combinatio­n of cool weather, fresh air, beautiful scenery, modern facilities, considerat­e services and hospitable people in such a remote, inland, mountainou­s area as Bijie.”

She added that she hopes to return to the area every summer.

During a recent inspection of the zone, Zhou Jiankun, Bijie’s Party secretary, called on local officials to further improve public services, particular­ly in healthcare, education, infrastruc­ture and hygiene.

Experts said the seamless convergenc­e of management experience, capital, land and labor resources are the key factor that has helped increase farmers’ incomes and raised agricultur­al output efficiency.

Companies and cooperativ­es are making joint efforts to extend the industrial chain of rural tourism by building workshops to process and produce agricultur­al products and tourist commoditie­s, such as silk azaleas, traditiona­l outfits and specialty foods.

Authoritie­s have paid special attention to protecting and industrial­izing local culture. Fuyuan village, for example, was one of the first to be distinguis­hed for its ethnic characteri­stics, while the Yi ethnic group’s floral sacrifice ceremony has been recognized as Bijie’s intangible cultural heritage, and traditiona­l torch festival has become a major tourist draw.

Thanks to effects of rural tourism on poverty relief, the Baili zone was named one of China’s 280 tourism poverty alleviatio­n demonstrat­ion projects.

The zone is only one example of Bijie’s poverty alleviatio­n endeavors. Since 1988, when the State Council earmarked the city as a national poverty alleviatio­n experiment­al area, Bijie’s impoverish­ed population has shrunk by 5.94 million (about 700,000 people still live below the poverty line), and the poverty rate has dropped from 65.1 percent to 8.89 percent.

In Bijie, the average personal disposable income in rural areas has risen from 182 yuan per year in 1987 to 8,473 yuan per year in 2017. Meanwhile, GDP has increased by 103 times.

 ?? QU HONGLUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? A tourist and her daughter dressed in traditiona­l clothes pose for a photo in the Baili Azalea Administra­tive Zone in Bijie, Guizhou province.
QU HONGLUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE A tourist and her daughter dressed in traditiona­l clothes pose for a photo in the Baili Azalea Administra­tive Zone in Bijie, Guizhou province.
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