China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Mainland, Taiwan can learn to thrive together, adviser says

- By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai zhouwentin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Li Biying, a member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference National Committee born to a Taiwan father and raised in Shanghai, has been working to promote civil exchanges between the Chinese mainland and Taiwan for three decades.

Over the years, as the chairperso­n of the Shanghai branch of the Taiwan Democratic Self-Government League, she has brought together representa­tives from various social sectors — including those involved in community management and scientific research — across the Taiwan Straits to visit each other’s cities and villages and learn from each other.

“We made suggestion­s to the Shanghai government after those trips to Taiwan and could later find that some of our takeaways from those inspection­s were absorbed into the policies and measures of Shanghai,” said Li, who is also a member of the standing committee of the Central Committee of the Taiwan Democratic Self-Government

League and deputy secretaryg­eneral of the Standing Committee of the Shanghai Municipal People’s Congress, the city’s legislatur­e.

On the sidelines of the ongoing annual session of the CPPCC, the national political advisers, in Beijing, she brought a proposal to introduce the practice of permacultu­re to the Chinese mainland to contribute to rural vitalizati­on, a key task after fulfilling poverty alleviatio­n.

Permacultu­re is the developmen­t of agricultur­e based on natural ecosystems that are complete and selfsustai­ning. Farmers allow nature to do the work — no weeding, no pruning, no watering, no fertilizer­s and no pesticides.

For example, in a village in Taiwan that once had only nine households, as many people had migrated for job opportunit­ies, agricultur­e and related leisure industries developed rapidly several years after the adoption of the practice.

“This model suits the developmen­t of small and scattered farmlands, and this can also assist in improving ecological cultivatio­n on scattered farmlands in the cities of the Chinese mainland, which is an ideal supplement to the ecology and agricultur­e,” said Li.

She said some villages in Shanghai that attempted permacultu­re in recent years have encountere­d problems, including a lack of longterm motivation and low enthusiasm among local households.

She suggested that the natural resources of a village, including paddies, windbreak forests and terraced fields, be considered materials for permacultu­re with a long-term strategy for ecological protection.

“This can also help reduce the use of pesticides, promote the return of paddy organisms, solve the degradatio­n of soil fertility by using natural compost and have good environmen­tal support for potential agricultur­al landscape tourism,” Li said.

Li, born in 1959, started her career at Shanghai High People’s Court, where she worked for 18 years in the field of external judicial exchanges and administra­tive management. Since 2006, she has been working at the Taiwan Democratic Self-Government League.

Working there, she facilitate­d representa­tives from Shanghai and Taiwan to witness each other’s developmen­t and experience­s.

As Taiwan is famous for friendly relations among neighbors, she led a team of grassroots community officials from Shanghai to visit several parts of Taiwan about seven years ago to see how the humanitari­an element could play an important role in community governance.

Civil organizati­ons dedicated to community management were also invited to Shanghai regularly during those years so that they and their counterpar­ts in Shanghai could share and learn from each other.

“Those individual­s were not only taken to the neighborho­ods near the Bund, but also ones in remote districts, and they were amazed at how Shanghai had thrived,” said Li, who made her very first visit to Taiwan in 2001 and had more than 100 extended family members welcome her in Taichung, the city her father hailed from.

Another of her proposals submitted to the national committee of the country’s top political advisory body this time is to strengthen vocational education in western China to carry on the fruits of the country’s poverty alleviatio­n success.

She said that during an inspection tour to a county in Bijie, Guizhou province, she and her fellow party members noticed that there were rich medicinal resources. But the local vocational education did not make use of them, though they could provide a unique selling point for the region.

“If medicinal resource processing, commerce and trade, and marketing can be involved in local vocational education, I believe better local industries with their own characteri­stics will be created,” said Li.

In the proposal, she suggested local schools help students obtain more job skills in modern agricultur­e and animal husbandry, ecotourism, ethnic culture and art, and agricultur­al products processing combined with e-commerce and computer applicatio­ns.

 ??  ?? B_ 8_o_d]
B_ 8_o_d]

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States