Premier urges meeting deadline of shanty town renovation
Updated: 2015-10-10 21:11
(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||||
BEIJING - Chinese Premier Li Keqiang urged local governments to push forward renovation of shanty towns as a national work conference was convened on the issue on Saturday.
"Renovation of shanty towns bears many low-income families' hopes in improving housing conditions and is also a focal point in pushing forward people-oriented urbanization," said Li in a written instruction.
Although progress has been made on this issue, challenges remain, Li said.
Local governments of different levels should ramp up efforts including providing financial and tax support, creating new mechanisms for private capital to take part in the task so as to meet the deadline.
China has set goals to construct 36 million affordable houses between 2011 and 2015.
Over the past four years, more than 20 million affordable houses were completed across the country, with 12 million under construction, and the assistance fund for building the houses has reached 710 billion yuan, the Ministry of Housing and Urban-rural Development data showed in May.
Related Stories
Shanty town rebuilding builds new life for forest people 2015-03-26 17:44
Today's Top News
Documents of Nanjing Massacre inscribed on Memory of World Register
Xi congratulates Kim on WPK anniversary
CPC expels media exec over UK 'green card'
Chinese students' print-like English handwriting stirs controversy
IMF's Lagarde says Chinese economy is not all 'doom and gloom'
German public prosecutors raid Volkswagen offices
Russia dismisses US refusal to share intelligence in campaign in Syria
World soccer rocked by suspension of Blatter and Platini
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
British minister's remarks have Britons, Chinese puzzled |
Stepping up |
Rural families still hope for male heirs |
Blue skies over Beijing ... for now |
V-Day parade for 70th WWII anniversary |
Tianjin blasts: Death, damage and bravery |