Li targets poverty in village visit
Updated: 2016-02-02 04:20
By Zhang Yu(China Daily)
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Premier meets with rural families, offers encouragement
Premier Li Keqiang ladles dumplings to Ma Ancang, an elderly ethnic Hui local resident, at an elderly care center in Guyuan, Ningxia Hui autonomous region, on Monday. LIU ZHEN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE |
Visiting people and households living in poverty has been an annual routine for Premier Li Keqiang before the Chinese Lunar New Year for the past two years, bringing them greetings as well as learning more about their living conditions.
This year, Li's visit to families in poverty took him to a village in Guyuan, in the southern part of the Ningxia Hui autonomous region, where he arrived on Monday.
This is Li's fourth visit to Ningxia in the past six years. The previous three times, beginning in 2010 when he was the country's vice-premier, mostly centered on deepening the region's western development strategy as well as boosting local economies.
His visit to Ningxia on Monday focused on lifting poverty.
Banzigou village in southern Ningxia has more than 1,300 people, all of them of the Hui ethnic group. Among them, 523 have been living below the poverty line of an annual income of 2,300 yuan ($350).
On Monday afternoon, 15-year-old Wang Yansi was helping his elder sister with cooking when Premier Li and his entourage from Beijing stepped into their room. The middle-school student said he was "so nervous and surprised that he almost held his breath".
The village of Xiji county, more than an hour drive from Guyuan, faces extremely severe drought conditions as well as dilapidated roads. The county was once defined by the United Nations as one of the places with "the worst living conditions".
Wang's house is on a mountain, so it can only be reached by climbing. The house has no lights, no chairs, no indoor toilet and no tap water. Only a mobile phone connects the family of five with the outside world. The family needs to walk 5 kilometers to get water.
Li was touched by the dilapidated scene. He turned to the Wang Jinbao, a 50-year-old farmer, to learn about the family's annual income.
The family, which has an annual income of about 4,500 yuan, plants potatoes and corn for food. After learning that for years the family has needed to walk far to get water, using five big plastic barrels, Li encouraged the father by saying that the village will soon be moving to an area with better natural conditions.
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