China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Charity chief praises country’s efforts

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

China has beaten absolute poverty at home a decade ahead of the UN deadline, and it has never forgotten those left behind, a Chinese charity leader said on Thursday.

The nation has met the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t 10 years ahead of schedule by helping almost 100 million rural residents escape poverty since late 2012, said Wang Xingzui, executive vicepresid­ent of the China Foundation for Poverty Alleviatio­n, a humanitari­an relief and developmen­t organizati­on.

Meanwhile, China has fulfilled its “due internatio­nal responsibi­lity”, he said at the Vision China virtual event.

“There is only one Earth, and only one shared future for humanity,” Wang said, citing a speech that President Xi Jinping made at the World Economic Forum Virtual Event of the Davos Agenda in January.

“As we cope with the current crisis and endeavor to make a better day for everyone, we need to stand united and work together,” he added.

In 2012, China launched a poverty-curbing campaign to boost rural incomes and make sure that the poor are properly fed and clothed and have access to compulsory education, basic healthcare and adequate housing.

Since then, the foundation has assisted 35 million rural poor, Wang said.

He used Xueshan village in Sichuan province as an example. financial support.

The village was one of 128,000 nationwide that labeled as impoverish­ed.

Wang said the organizati­on has also been an active participan­t in the drive for building a community with a shared future for mankind, a proposal put forward by Xi in 2015.

He said it has targeted six sustainabl­e developmen­t goals — no poverty, no hunger, good health and well-being, quality education, clean water and sanitation, and decent work and economic growth — as it operates a number of developmen­t programs in Asia and Africa.

The programs collective­ly benefit more than 1.3 million people in 24 countries, figures from the foundation showed.

While speaking at the event, Wang shared stories of four of its signature overseas programs — the Smiling Children School Feeding Program, the Myanmar Paukpaw Scholarshi­p Project, the Panda Pack Project and the Youth Vocational Training Program.

One was about Girma, a 13-year-old boy who came to Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia, with his mother from the nation’s eastern Somali region in 2018 after his father died.

That same year, the school where Girma has enrolled was about were selected for the Smiling Children School Feeding Program, which offers free breakfast and lunch for students.

“A full stomach and improved nutrition have resulted in beneficiar­y students concentrat­ing better in class and showing better academic performanc­e, contributi­ng to the prevention of the intergener­ational transmissi­on of poverty,” he said.

The CFPA has helped feed 66,361 children like Girma in Ethiopia, Sudan, Nepal, Myanmar and Pakistan, he noted.

Wang said such stories provide vivid illustrati­ons on how peopleto-people connectivi­ty has deepened through community-based developmen­t programs.

China has accomplish­ed the task of building a “moderately prosperous society in all aspects” — of which zero absolute poverty is a benchmark requiremen­t — and embarked on a new journey toward the second centennial goal of building a modern socialist country.

As a responsibl­e major country, China stands ready to share its theories and practices in poverty reduction with the rest of the world, Wang said.

He said that the foundation will continue implementi­ng domestic developmen­t programs with nongovernm­ental resources to consolidat­e poverty reduction achievemen­ts and facilitate the national rural vitalizati­on strategy.

It will also roll out new programs in other developing countries to meet the new challenges in global poverty governance and to build a world free of poverty.

 ??  ?? Villagers from there now live in newly built homes with “sustainabl­e livelihood­s” thanks to the charity’s
Villagers from there now live in newly built homes with “sustainabl­e livelihood­s” thanks to the charity’s

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