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Battle against poverty being won in Tibet

Updated: Sep 1, 2020 By Palden Nyima China Daily Print
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Students learn how to cook at a vocational skills training school in Tibet's Gyalze county. PALDEN NYIMA/CHINA DAILY

Major milestone

Last year marked a major milestone in the region's poverty alleviation push, with its Party committees and governments at all levels recording significant progress.

Pu Zhengxue, head of the Policy and Regulations Department of Tibet's Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviation, said 628,000 impoverished people from the region's 74 counties and districts have been lifted out of poverty since 2016.

He said 150,000 of them, in the last 19 areas still listed as impoverished, had completed all the necessary work for poverty alleviation last year and were just waiting for the official declaration from the central government.

Dadron Lhazom, an e-commerce entrepreneur in Namling county, one of the 19 areas, said she has been receiving various forms of support from the government.

Her business, established in 2018, sells handicrafts of the Tibetan ethnic group and local specialties such as carpets, cushions, blankets, honey, leather bags and incense, helping needy residents work toward a better life.

She has a workshop in her home village in the county's Dana township that employs 12 local people, including five from formerly impoverished families and two college graduates.

Her company sells products all over the country via the Taobao e-commerce platform. It also operates a business account on the Douyin social media platform. It earned more than 420,000 yuan ($61,332) from sales last year.

Role model

The county government has held up Dadron Lhazom's business as a model for poverty alleviation efforts.

Last year, with help from the government, a store selling her locally made products was set up at the county seat, with the rent waived.

"Without the support of the government, my family and my friends, I could not have gone as far as I have," she said. "I feel grateful to all of them, especially the county government."

Dadron Lhazom plans to expand her business to benefit more villagers.

"I hope to encourage more villagers to learn skills to make carpets, tapestries and blankets," she said. "I hope more college graduates get involved in entrepreneurship and e-commerce."

The regional authorities have also focused on moving communities to better homes to improve their lives.

A total of 18.92 billion yuan has been invested in the effort, with more than 260,000 people moving into new homes from 2016 to last year, accounting for more than 98 percent of the targeted population.

Samdrub Tsering, from Kyilung village in Namling county, said the new homes have allowed the community to benefit from modern amenities and technology.

Before moving in 2016, villagers endured a harsh environment at an average altitude above 4,100 meters. Medical treatment, transportation and schools were inadequate, he said.

"Before 2016, I did not know that a mother could get subsidies and support when giving birth in a hospital. I did not know it could be safer for both mother and child," Samdrub Tsering said.

The township center also used to be inaccessible for many villagers. While the nearest household lives about 10 km away, some families were 200 km from town, with no telecommunication networks available. Road conditions were terrible, he said.

Thanks to the government's poverty alleviation measures, livelihoods have improved tremendously over the years, Samdrub Tsering said.

"Before 2016, I did not plan to send my children to school because it was too far. I worried about their journey there," he said, adding that everyone now wanted to send their children to receive education "as early as possible".

In the past, villagers also had to ride horses and yaks to go to hospital or get supplies, but now they can drive or take a bus, the 35-year-old said. "It takes only a few minutes," he added.

Similarly, information about the latest policies and job opportunities to help residents move ahead are readily available in their new neighborhoods, a far cry from the remote, mountainous areas of the past, he said.

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