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Minorities get boost from Govt, UNDP
Beijing(China)—The government
has teamed up with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) to
alleviate poverty among China’s minority groups, in part by helping them
develop culture-based industries and tourism.
The project, “Poverty Reduction for Ethnic Minorities in China,” was
launched earlier this month in three regions in western China, namely
Qinghai, Yunnan and the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. The State
Ethnic Affairs Commission (SEAC) will contribute US$5 million to the
programme, while the UNDP will contribute US$2 million.
Building leadership capacity, developing communities and encouraging the
growth of culture-based industries are some of the project’s goals.
Khalid Malik, UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative
in China, said the project would support government efforts to alleviate
poverty.
“Since more than 46 per cent of the poor people in China are from ethnic
groups, successful efforts to reduce their poverty will contribute
significantly to the efforts of poverty reduction of the whole country,”
Malik said in a press release from the UNDP last week in Beijing.
Tourism and cultural industries will play a key role in Poverty
Reduction for Ethnic Minorities in China, said Yang Fan, a deputy
director at the SEAC who works with the programme.
“Ethnic minorities in China have unique cultural and natural assets,”
Yang said. “These should be protected and sustained. This programme will
help develop their culture while at the same time alleviating poverty.”
The project is also expected to train 400 officials throughout China 90
from the provincial level and 310 from the local level in the latest
poverty-reduction techniques.
“It is crucial for policymakers at the local-government level to learn
advanced management measures to reduce poverty,” said Zhou Meixiang, a
programme manager at the UNDP International Poverty Reduction Centre in
China. Beyond offering management courses and advice to officials, the
programme will also encourage individuals and communities to strengthen
their capacity to fight against poverty.
More than 10 villages will be selected to take part in
community-development projects. For example, minority farmers will set
up grassroots organizations to address the challenges they face
collectively. “This project will focus on scaling up efforts to better
organize individuals through associations of product producers and
service providers,” Malik said. “They will learn decision-making
processes based on their own needs and how to search for home-grown
solutions to fight against poverty.” Zhou said the goal was to educate
villagers about movements in the marketplace and help them foresee
changes in supply and demand.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |