The Chinese government has rolled out a major program
to give 160 million rural people access to reliable supplies of
safe drinking water over the next five years.
The plan, approved on Wednesday at a meeting of the
State Council chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao, gives priority to rural areas where
drinking water has been contaminated by fluorine, arsenic, salt,
pollution, and the schistosoma worm, which causes the disease
schistosomiasis.
Smaller ethnic minority groups, rural schools, and
people displaced by the construction of reservoirs also top the
agenda.
The plan includes "comprehensive measures," including
the protection of drinking water sources, waste treatment, improved
water quality monitoring, and water conservation awareness
campaigns.
By the end of 2005, the government had improved
drinking water supplies to more than 280 million rural people,
according to official statistics.
The central government has urged local governments to
make the provision of clean drinking water a top priority. The
problem remains "prominent" in some rural areas.
The rural drinking water safety program is to be
funded mainly by the government, although various non-governmental
organizations are also encouraged to contribute.
At least 300 million rural residents in China have no
access to safe, clean drinking water, and only 31 percent of rural
toilets satisfy national hygiene standards, according to the
Ministry of Health.
(Xinhua News Agency August 31, 2006)
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