China Daily (Hong Kong)

Region banks on benefits of education

- By XU WEI and DAQIONG in Lhasa

Eliminatin­g poverty in the Tibet autonomous region will be a long and arduous task, according to an official with the regional government.

The harsh natural environmen­t and wide geographic­al spread of people living in poverty mean the scale of the problem should not be underestim­ated, said Lu Huadong, deputy head of the Tibet poverty alleviatio­n office: “It would be impossible to accomplish the alleviatio­n targets overnight, given the region’s poor economic situation in the past.”

Meanwhile, the lack of initiative shown by many residents has exacerbate­d the challenge the authoritie­s face. “Some of them are living in the past. Their thoughts are not entirely suited to the age in which we live,” Lu said.

The authoritie­s have set a goal of lifting 590,000 people — about 20 percent of the regional population — out of poverty by 2020.

The target will be met through government investment in sectors such as tourism, e-commerce and agricultur­al cooperativ­es, which will help local herders and farmers to relocate to less hostile areas, and people living in straighten­ed circumstan­ces will be offered training and part-time jobs. people

number of people who are expected to be lifted out of poverty by authoritie­s by 2020 in Tibet, which is about 20 percent of the regional population

Lu hopes that expanding the coverage of education will stop poverty being passed down from generation to generation.

In Nyingchi, a prefecture­level city in the southeast of the region, the authoritie­s have invested nearly 3 million yuan ($434,000) to help children from povertystr­icken families receive a full education at school. That is in accordance with the regional government’s program to provide a free 15-year education, from kindergart­en to high school, for every child in the region.

Local authoritie­s also provide every college student with an annual allowance of 4,000 yuan for food and tuition fees, and a subsidy, ranging from 500 yuan to 2,500 yuan, to cover the cost of traveling between home and college.

“The most effective way of reducing poverty in Tibet would be for one child from every family to graduate from high school or even college,” Lu said.

 ?? XU WEI / CHINA DAILY ?? Dawa Phuntsok checks incense at the factory in Nyingchi where he is the major shareholde­r.
XU WEI / CHINA DAILY Dawa Phuntsok checks incense at the factory in Nyingchi where he is the major shareholde­r.

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