Senior officials with the Ministry of Land and Resources yesterday
highly praised a China-Germany cooperative project on land
redeployment and village renovation for its successful innovations,
which are expected to be spread throughout the country.
Assisted by the German Hanns Seidel Foundation, with an investment
of nearly 4.5 million yuan (US$543,500), the project was started in
Nanzhanglou Village of Qingzhou, in East China's Shandong Province,
in 1989.
"Aimed at creating a better environment and better working and
living conditions for villagers, the project has successfully
pursued large scale redeployment of land in the Chinese countryside
since 1999," said Vice-Minister of Land and Resources Lu Xinshe
yesterday.
"It has proven that land redeployment can effectively accelerate
economic development in rural areas and increase farmers' income,"
Lu said.
Lu
has vowed to continue to draw on advanced experience from abroad,
especially from Germany, as China further strengthens land
redeployment.
Lu
made the remarks yesterday at a seminar in Beijing, which was one
of the various activities being held to mark the 30th anniversary
of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and
Germany.
Starting in 1989, the cultivable land in Nanzhanglou Village has
been redeployed in a systematic way and leveled to facilitate
mechanization, according to Yuan Xiangsheng, general manager of the
project.
Yuan noted that the work has drawn on the agricultural development
experience of the Bavarian region of Germany, with the help of the
foundation.
Out-of-season vegetable planting, livestock rearing and
agricultural by-product processing have also been introduced to the
village during the project, increasing farmers' average annual
income from 1,950 yuan (US$236) in 1989 to 4,600 yuan (US$556) last
year.
The roads dividing the fields were paved at a cost of 4.3 million
yuan (US$519,000) and previously uncultivated fields were brought
into production with an investment of 3.5 million yuan
(US$423,000), according to Yuan.
The land redeployment has made possible other developments. For
example, over 50 private enterprises have been set up.
"We have enjoyed better living conditions, education, cultural
activities and medical services since the project was implemented,"
said villager Zhang Detian.
The total investment in the project has reached 40 million yuan
(US$4.8 million), according to Yuan.
"We hope the experience gained through the project can be shared
with the vast western regions of the country to help China's
strategy of western development," said Rainer B. Gepperth, head of
the foundation's international cooperation institute.
Gepperth also noted that he hoped the co-operation with China will
continue and that the fields of cooperation can be broadened.
(China Daily October 9, 2002)
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