CHINAEUROPE AFRICAASIA 中文双语Français
Home\Top News

Xi's idea of 20 years ago changing farmers' lives

By Wang Hao and Wang Huazhong in Yinchuan | China Daily | Updated: 2017-10-03 06:53

Five years ago, Hai Guobao's life was difficult, but not because his family did not work hard.

Generations of the family had farmed mountainous land in the Ningxia Hui autonomous region.

There, summer is arid, yet rainfall is excessive during autumn harvests. Yields were decided virtually by fate, locals say, after they had invested a whole year's worth of labor.

"We felt satisfied when we had enough to eat, but drought frequently drew us back to poverty," said Hai, who is in his 60s.

Hai's grandchildren did not go to primary school until age 8 because the 8-kilometer round trip to school was too long for younger ones.

"We could never change our lives without the Party's migration policies," he said.

In May 2012, all eight members of Hai's family moved to Minning township in northern Ningxia as part of the region's plan to relocate 350,000 people out of mountains and valleys in Guyuan.

Hai, along with 67 others in his village, spent only 12,800 yuan ($1,925) to build a new house of 54 square meters, excluding a courtyard, thanks to a government subsidy.

Soldiers based nearby also helped to move the family's belongings under the Party's command.

"I felt so happy to find that my new home is connected to electricity and tap water," Hai said.

"The school is only minutes walk away. I'm illiterate, my son is half-literate, but I hope one day my grandchildren can go to college."

In the past two decades, more than 60,000 immigrants settled in Minning, which did not exist 20 years ago.

President Xi Jinping proposed moving people in villages to the new settlement in 1997 when he made a survey trip to Ningxia as deputy Party chief of Fujian province. He was deeply concerned with the way people were living in Guyuan, and the United Nations also defined the situation as unfit.

Minning township is located between the eastern foothills of the Helan Mountains, which fend off cold air from Inner Mongolia, and the Yellow River, which is used for irrigation.

In July 2016, Xi revisited Ningxia and called for no one to be left behind regardless of geography or ethnic group as the nation strives to comprehensively build a moderately prosperous society by 2020.

Xi also visited Hai's home. Hai recalled that Xi went into his kitchen to check his access to water and to lift a pot lid to see what they were having for dinner. Xi also checked whether Hai's kang, a traditional brick bed that can be heated from the bottom, worked well.

"I was speechless when seeing him. It was like seeing one of my family members returning after a long period of time," he said. "It was just like a dream."

Hai's eldest son now drives agricultural machines for a vineyard nearby and his other son is a construction worker in the town. The family of eight people earns about 80,000 yuan a year.

"We don't farm now but we eat better than we used to as farmers," Hai said.

According to Minning's government, locals' per capita annual income rose from 500 yuan in 1997 to 10,732 yuan in 2016, surpassing the average for rural residents in the region.

The local economy has also benefitted in recent years from investments from Fujian province and other regions to boost industries and promote modern farming techniques.

Taking the advantage of abundant sunshine, many rooftops are covered with solar panels and locals are helping to grow high-priced raspberries and wine grapes with the help of the dry climate.

A major auto company has also set up a car parts factory to offer more jobs to the migrants. "We will have better development and a better life," Hai said.

BACK TO THE TOP
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US