China has vowed to lift
148,000 villages out of poverty by 2010. The plan would benefit
23.6 million people, 80 percent of the country's rural
poor.
Liu Jian, director of the Chinese State Council
Leading Group Office for Poverty Alleviation and Development, made
the remarks yesterday at the Ministerial Level Poverty Reduction
Seminar for Developing Countries in Beijing.
"Ten percent of the nation's poverty-reduction funds
will be used in job training for rural people in the next five
years so that the group can enter the non-agricultural job market,"
Liu said.
"The State Council has recognized 30 labor pilot
training bases across the country. A sound training network will
take shape, and it is expected 90 percent of the rural population
will find jobs after they are trained."
The country will also give more support to major
enterprises that contribute the most to the poverty reduction cause
at the local level. To date the Leading Group Office has authorized
260 such enterprises, which help more than 13 million poor
people.
China launched its poverty
reduction campaign in 1986. Up to 2005, poverty alleviation aid had
reached 125.6 billion yuan (US$15.7 billion), as well as 200
billion yuan (US$25 billion) in interest-free loans, the Leading
Group Office report said.
The number of people living in absolute poverty, those
earning less than 683 yuan (US$85.38) a year, decreased from 125
million in 1985 to 23.65 million at the end of 2005, the report
said.
More than 70 percent of villages in 592 counties
originally included in the poverty alleviation plan had access to
roads, electricity, telephone service, satellite TV, safe drinking
water and healthcare services at the end of 2005. The enrolment
rate of school-age children was 94.7 percent.
The number of people lifted out of poverty in China
represents 75 percent the total of all developing countries, the
report said.
"The Chinese leadership has formulated an ambitious
vision of balanced development quite similar to the Millennium
Development Goals," UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan wrote in a
congratulatory letter released yesterday. "The UN applauds the
emphasis on reducing inequality and promoting growth that is both
sustainable and inclusive."
Liu said that aside from its domestic progress, China
would like to become an international platform for exchange and
collaboration on poverty reduction among developing
countries.
China also issued China
Poverty Eradication Awards yesterday to 12 individuals and
organizations to mark the International Day for the Eradication of
Poverty.
In a written speech to the ceremony, Premier Wen
Jiabao said the eradication of poverty in China requires a
sustained and long-term effort, and governments must do more to
improve living conditions in underdeveloped regions.
Poverty eradication is a historic task for China, said
Wen, adding that society should support and take part in the
efforts being made and that anti-poverty models should be widely
publicized.
Among the winners were the United Nations Development
Programme, China Construction Bank, the China Children and
Teenagers' Fund, the China Lifeline Express Foundation and several
individuals such as Wang Guangmei, the wife of former Chairman of
People's Republic Liu Shaoqi, who passed away on Friday.
(China Daily October 18,
2006)
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