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The housing conditions and living environment for
urban and rural residents have been improved considerably. China actively
promotes the development of an urban housing security system, which comprises
the system of publicly accumulated housing funds, system of affordable and
functional housing, and the system of low-rent housing. By the end of 2004, the
low-rent housing system for minimum-income families was established in 35 large
and medium-sized cities. By the end of 2003, the per-capita living space in
cities and towns reached 23.7 sq m, and it was 27.2 sq m in rural areas.
Families and communities began to realize the importance ofenvironmental
protection, and the people's living environment was further improved.
The Chinese government continues to take effective measures to help the
rural poor shake off poverty. In 2004, the central government earmarked 12.2
billion yuan as funds to aid the poor. By adopting effective measures such as
improving production and living conditions in the poor areas, and enhancing the
comprehensive quality of poor rural farmers, the government has greatly reduced
the number of poor farmers without adequate food and clothing throughout the
country. The population of poor farmers in the countryside was 2.9 million fewer
than in the previous year. The International Aid-the-Poor Conference convened in
Shanghai in May 2004 spoke highly of the achievements China hadmade in helping
the poor, declaring, "The achievements China has made in helping the poor is a
good example. It has proved that it is not an unreachable goal for mankind to
eliminate poverty. The example of China will reverse the pessimistic sentiment
surrounding the argument on poverty elimination."
The Chinese government considers the safety of life of the people above
everything else. In recent years, the state has takena series of measures to
enhance production safety and check the occurrence of all sorts of accidents. In
2004, the state promulgated one administrative law, 15 departmental regulations,
five industrial standards on production safety and more than 70 regulatory
documents to tackle the problem of industrial hazards. Small coal mines and
other industrial enterprises which did not meet the requirements for production
safety were resolutely shut down. The total number of accidents of the whole
year somewhat decreased. The number of accidents and deaths throughout the
country were reduced by 16.22 and 0.23 percent, respectively, compared with the
previous year. The state made great efforts to guarantee safety in coal mines,
including preventing gas explosions. It strengthened the establishment of safety
productionsystems and mechanisms and exerted concentrated efforts to tackle
gas-related accidents in coal mines. As a result, the number of gas-related
accidents in coal mines dropped by 15.6 percent, and that of deaths by 7.8
percent.
The state attaches great
importance to combating natural disasters and carrying out related relief work,
making sure that people hit by natural disasters are able to subsist. In 2004,
natural disasters caused great damage throughout China. Serious flooding
occurred in some medium and small river basins, coastal areas in Zhejiang
Province were devastated by the strongest typhoon since 1956, and in some
regions mountain torrents, mud-rock flows and landslides happened frequently.
Because the government had improved its early-warning systems, exercised
scientific command and effective administration, people in the disaster-stricken
areas were evacuated and resettled promptly, andthe injured received timely
treatment. The Ministry of Civil Affairs and the Ministry of Finance jointly
appropriated 4 billionyuan in relief funds, plus 4.89 million yuan in donated
funds, anddispatched 31,000 tents to the disaster-stricken areas. The government
helped evacuate and resettle 6.11 million disaster victims, and rebuilt more
than 1.4 million houses that had been destroyed in the disasters. During the
spring and winter of 2004, when crops were not harvested, some 90 million people
received relief aid, and their fundamental needs for food, clothing, lodging,
water and medical treatment were met.
The state continues to provide special aid to minimum-income urban families
whose members either suffer from critical illness or are seriously handicapped
and without any financial income. To carry out the "Measures for Assisting and
Managing Urban Vagrants and Beggars with No Means of Livelihood," in 2004 a
total of 550,000 vagrants and beggars received much-needed assistance from the
government. Now there are 909 assistance and management centers across the
country and 130 assistance and protection centers for vagrant children. A system
of guaranteeing the minimum standard ofliving for rural residents has been
established in 1,206 counties (cities), with 4,960,000 beneficiaries.
China attaches great importance to the health conditions of thepeople. The
national public medical care network has been strengthened further. In 2004,
China had 296,000 health care institutions, 3,047,000 hospital and clinic beds,
4,390,000 medical personnel, and 3,586 disease prevention and control centers
(including anti-epidemic stations) with 160,000 medical personnel. Moreover,
there were 1,279 health care supervision and examination institutions with
26,000 medical personnel, and 42,000township clinics with 669,000 beds and
881,000 medical personnel. A new rural cooperative medical service system has
been tried out in 333 counties (cities) across the country. It covers about 100
million rural residents so far, including 80.4 million farmers.
The state has strengthened its overall supervision
over food and drugs. It cracks down heavily on such illegal and criminal acts as
the manufacture and sale of counterfeit and inferior foodstuffs and drugs, and
poisonous and harmful foodstuffs in order to ensure the safety of consumers.
Meanwhile, it has adoptedeffective measures to prevent, treat and control
serious epidemics.It quickly brought under control and eventually eliminated the
SARS epidemic that occurred in Guangdong, Beijing and part of Anhui Province.
The State Council has issued the "Notice on Enhancing the Prevention and
Treatment of AIDS." A working committee on the prevention and treatment of AIDS
was set up, and a national conference on the prevention and treatment of AIDS
was held. The state has provided free anti-AIDS medicine to patients among
farmers and to other patients in straitened circumstances. In AIDS-prevalent
areas, people receive anonymous examinations free of charge, and pregnant women
with the HIV virus receive freemedical screening to prevent them from spreading
the virus to their babies. Orphans of AIDS patients are exempted from paying
school fees, and financial support is given to needy AIDS patients.President Hu
Jintao has visited AIDS patients in hospitals, showing that the state attaches
great importance to the preventionand treatment of AIDS and that it cares about
AIDS patients.
To ensure the people's health and safety, and to protect their interests
and right to enjoy a wholesome environment, the state revised the "Law on the
Prevention and Control of Environmental Pollution by Solid Waste," issued the
"Measures on the Licensed Management of Dangerous Waste," "Measures Regarding
AdministrativePenalties for and Management of Medical Waste" and the "National
Plan for the Construction of Installations for the Disposal of Dangerous and
Medical Waste." In order to ensure the people's health and protect the
environment, the government launched a special campaign to rectify and punish
enterprises which illegallydischarged pollution. In the campaign, it dealt with
3,365 severe cases of environmental pollution that seriously harmed people's
rights and interests, and closed down 6,462 enterprises that seriously polluted
the environment. With this effective crackdown,the environmental quality of some
areas was improved noticeably.
At present, the general health of the Chinese people is better than that of the average level of middle-income countries, and ranks among the top of the developing countries in this respect. The average life expectancy has increased from 35 years before thebirth of New China in 1949 to the present 71.4 years. The mortality rate of women in child-birth has dropped from 1,500 out of 100,000 in 1949 to 51.3 out of 100,000 in 2003, and the infant mortality rate from 200 before the birth of New China to 25.5 in 2003.
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