The country's 22 underpopulated ethnic groups will benefit from
a new round of poverty alleviation reforms with financial aid
totaling up to 1 billion yuan (US$123.46 million) in the next five
years.
Officials from the State Ethnic Affairs Commission made the
statement at a two-day working conference of the State Council on
the development of underpopulated ethnic groups, which ended
yesterday in Beijing.
The program will start next year with priority given to
infrastructure construction, including water conservation, power
grids, roads, and other public undertakings such as education,
sanitation and culture, said Yang Jianqiang, vice minister of the
commission.
The decision follows the adoption of a development plan in May
by the State Council, which indicated that poverty remained an
"outstanding issue" for these ethnic groups.
Official figures indicate that the population of each of the 22
ethnic groups is below 100,000, and that they total only about
630,000 -- less than 0.05 percent of the country's population.
Most of the ethnic groups are located in remote provinces or
autonomous regions, including Xinjiang,
Tibet, Inner
Mongolia and Yunnan.
The commission acknowledged that the economic development level
of the 22 ethnic groups lags far behind the country's average, and
they cited unfavorable natural conditions as the main reason.
"Many ethnic villages still lack power, highways, primary
schools, clinics and even drinkable water," Yang said, noting that
one-fourth of the population of the 22 groups still suffer from
inadequate food and clothing supply.
Therefore, after poverty alleviation, it is expected that by
2010, the living conditions of the 22 groups might reach the
average level of the locality, according to the development
plan.
Dalelhan Abelajan, head of the Tatar Village in Qitai County,
northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, said these
policies will speed up the development of the Tatar minority.
The Tatar minority have a population of 5,000, most of them
scattered in Xinjiang.
(China Daily August 31, 2005)
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