Officials, experts and scholars from around the world are
discussing ways to improve the rights of Chinese farmers at a
two-day workshop in Haikou, the capital of southern China's Hainan
Province, which opened here Thursday.
The meeting is co-sponsored by the Haikou-based China Institute for
Reform and Development and the International Republican Institute
of the United States.
More than 120 participants will discuss major issues such as public
policies concerning farmers after the SARS outbreak, the migration
of surplus laborers from the countryside, the rights of transient
workers from rural areas, and the link between farmers'
organizations and farmers' rights.
These participants have come from the United States, Norway, India
and Nepal as well as China to provide the Chinese government with
references in making policies on rural development.
China, with a population of 1.3 billion, has over 900 million rural
residents.
The growing economic gap between urban residents and rural people
is hindering China's sustainable development, though enormous
achievements have been made in the countryside over the past two
decades, according to some noted Chinese experts.
(People’s Daily August 1, 2003)
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