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‘Tibet people real beneficiaries of reform, development’
BEIJING—People of various
ethnic groups living in Tibet have benefited from reform and
development, said Qiangba Puncog, chairman of the Tibet autonomous
regional government, here on Wednesday.
“They are real beneficiaries,” he stressed, citing figures of Tibet’s
development to refute the Dalai Lama’s claim that the benefits of
Tibet’s development has been taken away by Han people and “cultural
genocide”. “The Dalai Lama’s claims are lies to instigate antagonism
between various ethnic groups and to cheat the international community,”
he said.
Tibet has registered an annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate
of over 12 percent for seven consecutive years. In 2007, the region’s
GDP reached 34.2 billion yuan (about 4.88 billion U.S. dollars) with
12,000 yuan per capita, he said at a news conference. In the past five
years, the central government has subsidized Tibet with 94.7 billion
yuan and invested 60.1 billion in infrastructure construction, he said.
Currently, the average life expectancy of people in Tibet has increased
to 67 from 35.5 in the 1950s. He stressed the total population of
Tibetans has risen to 2.5 million, accounting for 95 percent of total
regional population, from 1.2 million in 1964. The average income of
farmers and herdsmen reached 2,788 yuan last year after maintaining a
double-digit growth rate for five straight years, he said.
He said “after the March 14 riots in Lhasa, the various ethnic groups in
Tibet will have a deeper understanding that stability will bring them
fortune while turbulence will only bring them misfortune.” “The Dalai
clique’s attempts to seek Tibetan independence through disruption of the
Beijing Olympics is doomed to fail,” he stressed. “No matter what
happened, our determination to safeguard unification of the motherland,
unity of various ethnic groups and social stability will remain
unchanged,” he said, stressing “nothing can shake this stance and
determination,”
“We firmly believe that the Beijing Olympics will be a success,” he
said. By the end of 2007, 612 townships had been connected by roads,
accounting for 89.6 percent of all townships in Tibet Autonomous Region,
and all townships had been linked with telephones. The government also
took measures to solve the drinking water difficulties and ensure
drinking water safety for 1.02 million farmers and herdsmen.
By now, over 110,000 households with 590,000 farmers and herdsmen have
moved into new houses since the Tibetan regional government has launched
a program in 2006 to build homes for 220,000 local farming and herding
households by 2010. Tibet also took the lead in adopting the free
nine-year compulsory education, both in rural and urban areas.—Xinhua |