World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz
yesterday praised the achievements of the poorest people of China
and said he was pleased the bank was working to support poverty
reduction efforts in the country.
After visiting some of the poorest
parts of the country, including remote villages in Gansu
Province, Wolfowitz said the efforts of poor people, often with
few resources, were inspiring. He signaled that the bank would
remain engaged in China to help create opportunities for about the
100 million people still living on less than a dollar a day.
Wolfowitz said: "It's stunning what
they've done with very little to work with. The house we were just
in is a fairly big house; the woman takes care of the house and the
livestock -- five sheep and a cow and a whole bio-gas cooking
operation. And the husband's off earning money to make it all
work.
"It's very impressive. I can't
imagine doing it myself. You have to be somewhat in awe of what
people who, you give them a little bit of a chance, will make a
better life for themselves and their children. It's really quite
amazing. We've seen it in other countries; we see it here in China,
and it's inspiring."
Lianxing Village has seen a rise in
living standards in recent years in part because villagers have
pooled their energy and resources, after discussing specific
project proposals and voting on them. Each villager is given one
potato to deposit in a bucket in front of his or her chosen
project. The one with the most potatoes wins, and the villagers
then are able to achieve the benefits of working together on
village-wide plans.
The approach has been used in the
bank-supported projects elsewhere in Gansu and in Inner Mongolia
Autonomous Region, and has now been adopted widely as a more
effective way to achieve village-level development.
One outcome in Lianxing has been the
widespread use of bio-gas for cooking, using the methane produced
by animal and human waste instead of having to rely on straw, coal
or wood -- all of which caused serious air pollution and
respiratory problems.
Wolfowitz's comments followed his
visit earlier in the day to another poor village -- Heping, a
village of Dongxiang minority Muslims high in the hills of Gansu --
and to the Juihuagou area nearby, where local people have helped
turn some of the most degraded land in China into terraces with
green fields of corn and fruit.
The Juihuagou area is part of a
bigger project, covering an area about the size of Belgium in
northwest China. When complete, it will have helped 50 million
people to raise their incomes, and greatly reduced the erosion of
soil into the Yellow River.
Before the project, about 1.6
billion tons a year washed into the river.
Wolfowitz said his impression from
visiting impoverished rural areas was mainly how different China
was from the rich coast to the poorer western areas. "I've been in
Shanghai, I've been in Beijing, Nanjing, and Guangzhou, all within
the last 5 years. We talk -- correctly -- about how much China's
accomplished. This is also a demonstration of how much more work
there is to be done. I'm very proud that the bank is participating
in it."
He said that a main message he would
take to the G20 finance ministers meeting in Beijing was that
"there's still a lot of poor people in the world, even here in
successful countries like China."
(China.org.cn October 14, 2005)
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