The final delivery of food aid from the United Nations World
Food Program, worth US$7.2 million, arrived at Chiwan Port in
Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong
Province, on Thursday morning.
The shipment of 43,450 tons of wheat will be sent inland to Gansu
and Shanxi
provinces and the Ningxia
Hui and Guangxi
Zhuang autonomous regions for poverty alleviation projects.
WFP China Representative Douglas Broderick said that the WFP and
China had agreed in February 2001 to phase out food aid because
China can now afford to eliminate extreme poverty itself.
According to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), in the
past 20 years China has cut the number of people living in extreme
poverty by more than 200 million.
With its rapid economic development, China has become an active
donor in world affairs. In the past four years, it has committed
US$5 million for WFP's projects in other countries. Chinese
nongovernmental organizations donated 500 million yuan (US$60.4
million) worth of aid to the Asian tsunami victims.
The WFP began providing food aid to China in 1979. The
organization provided US$1 billion worth of aid, assisting more
than 30 million Chinese in meeting their immediate food needs and
helping to build an infrastructure through programs exchanging food
for work and training.
"The WFP has contributed greatly to poverty alleviation in some
poor areas in China," said Liu Fuhe, spokesman for the State
Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviation and
Development. "These programs have been proved successful and
efficient."
China still has 26 million people living below the poverty line
and the central government has vowed to eliminate poverty by 2010.
The cessation of WFP assistance will not have a negative impact on
this plan.
The WFP and China will explore ways of strengthening their
decades-old partnership to address the growing problems of chronic
malnutrition.
"China will continue to participate in the poverty relief and
emergency aid projects launched by the WFP and share with the whole
world our expertise in poverty-relief and natural disaster aid,"
said an official with the International Cooperation Department of
the Ministry of Agriculture.
According to Broderick, the WFP also plans to increase purchases
in China of food and non-food aid materials. In 2004, the
organization bought US$30 million worth of aid materials from
China.
(Xinhua News Agency April 8, 2005)
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