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    Once 'unfit' for people, Ningxia mountainous region shakes off absolute poverty

    China Daily | Updated: 2020-11-20 09:07
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    Workers plant celery seedlings at a production base in Xiji county, Ningxia Hui autonomous region, on Sept 9. The base employs many poor workers from local villages. WU XIAOHUI/CHINA DAILY

    YINCHUAN-Xihaigu, one of China's poorest areas located in the Ningxia Hui autonomous region, has achieved a historic feat in eliminating absolute poverty.

    Xihaigu is a largely mountainous region that was labeled the "most unfit place for human settlement" by the United Nations in the 1970s due to land reclamation, drought and a fragile ecological environment. The situation was so severe that the region came to be known as China's "poverty king".

    On Monday, Xiji, the last poor county in the region, was removed from the list of poverty-stricken counties, marking the end of poverty in all nine poor counties in Xihaigu amid the country's efforts to eradicate absolute poverty by the end of 2020.

    "Wiping out absolute poverty in Xihaigu not only fully demonstrates the advantages of China's socialist system but also provides a valuable reference for the global poverty reduction cause," said Li Wenqing, an expert at the Ningxia Academy of Social Sciences.

    Farewell to 'muddy pit'

    In the 1980s, China implemented a large-scale program for development-oriented poverty relief in its northwestern regions, and Xihaigu was included.

    Since then, technology, funding, workers and policy support have arrived in Xihaigu, with the main objective of helping the poor shake off absolute poverty.

    Lannitan, which means "muddy pit" in English, is one of the poorest villages in Xiji county. True to its name, dirt roads in the destitute village have existed for centuries.

    Due to the terrible living conditions and scarce job opportunities, about one-third of the families in Lannitan have left. Villager Su Xiaoping had also planned to move four years ago.

    "It was too hard to survive," Su explained. "Who wants to leave their hometown to make a living?"

    In 2017, a 10-kilometer road was built, linking the village with the outside world, and also bringing confidence and hope to all remaining villagers. Meanwhile, with the support of the local government, Lannitan began to develop its cattle industry.

    Su decided to stay, and like other villagers, he was given preferential bank loans, which he used to plant corn and raise cows. In 2017, he earned over 50,000 yuan ($7,500), bringing his family off the village's list of impoverished households.

    In 2018, villagers voted to change the name of their home from Lannitan to Hanjiang, meaning "embracing the water."

    The village's experience epitomizes that of Xiji. In 2014, there were 238 poverty-stricken villages and around 155,000 people living below the poverty line in the county. Today, the number has dropped to zero.

    Go out and stay in

    Relocation has been a key measure for the region to alleviate poverty. Over the past three decades, Ningxia has relocated around 1.23 million people from inhospitable Xihaigu to areas along the Yellow River, the second longest in China.

    Hongsipu district, located in Ningxia's Wuzhong city, was once part of the Gobi Desert. It has now become one of China's largest settlement areas for people relocated from Xihaigu, with a population of about 230,000, after a section of the Yellow River was raised 300 meters and became a major water source for locals.

    Zang Weibing was one of the first batch of villagers to move to Hongsipu in 1999. Those villagers planted proso millet in the irrigated fields, never expecting the crop would flourish.

    "I've never seen 1-meter-tall proso millet in Xihaigu due to the lack of water," Zang said. "We gained a bumper harvest of proso millet in the first year after we moved here."

    Later, Zang started to develop the nursery stock industry and also made a handsome profit."I'm confident that our life will become better in Hongsipu."

    For those choosing to stay in Xihaigu, over 300 poverty-alleviation workshops have provided them with more job opportunities and sustainable sources of income.

    Meanwhile, poor households can receive a maximum government subsidy of 20,000 yuan and an average loan of 49,000 yuan to start up a business.

    This year, 71-year-old farmer Ma Youshen in Xiji's Piancheng township raised more cows and sheep with a loan of 200,000 yuan.

    "With such good policies in place, I'm sure to turn things around," Ma said.

    "The supportive policies have motivated more villagers to fight entrenched poverty," said Wang Xuejun, Party chief of Xiji. "We will offer people as much support as possible to help them live a better life with their own hands."

    Booming tourism industry

    Xihaigu was an oasis in the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220) until changes to the climate and human activities like excessive logging and land reclamation turned it into an inhospitable area with a fragile ecological environment.

    Over nearly two decades, Ningxia has made continuous efforts to return farmland to forest and grassland and prohibit grazing, and Xihaigu has turned green once again.

    Last year, over 70 percent of the area of Guyuan city, consisting of five Xihaigu counties, was covered in vegetation. Its forest coverage also rose from 1.4 percent in the 1970s to 28.4 percent by the end of last year.

    As a renowned tourist destination, the city received 6.5 million visitors last year, with tourism revenue totaling 4.5 billion yuan, providing over 20,000 jobs for local people.

    In the village of Yangling in Guyuan, the booming tourism sector has become its pillar industry. Last year, the village held a tourism festival, attracting over 100,000 tourists in 10 days and pocketing a comprehensive tourism income of over 3 million yuan, said He Dianquan, a village official.

    "Some earned up to 7,000 yuan a day by selling snacks, and we are happy to see the good environment begin to generate income for villagers," said He.

    Ma Kejun, 63, a villager in Yangling, turned his empty cowshed into a tea house three years ago to serve tourists babao tea, a local specialty that combines tea leaves with ingredients like red dates, dried longan, rose petals and sugar.

    "I earned about 5,000 yuan last year, and I'm satisfied with that," Ma said. "This year, I developed a new recipe, hoping that visitors from all over the world will enjoy my tea."

    XINHUA

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