Chinese leaders visit poor on holiday eve
www.chinaview.cn 2007-02-17 23:01:28

Chinese President Hu Jintao (R1) talks to a farm of Daping village of Dingxi city in Gansu Province, northwest China on Feb. 17, 2007. Hu visited the village on the lunar new year's eve.(

Chinese President Hu Jintao (R1) talks to a farm of Daping village of Dingxi city in Gansu Province, northwest China on Feb. 17, 2007. Hu visited the village on the lunar new year's eve.(Xinhua Photo)
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Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao gestures to extend a festival greeting to Wang Huanrong, 93, a resident of Fushun city, in Fushun city, northeast China's      Liaoning Province, on      Friday, two days before the Chinese Spring Festival.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao gestures to extend a festival greeting to Wang Huanrong, 93, a resident of Fushun city, in Fushun city, northeast China's Liaoning Province, on Friday, two days before the Chinese Spring Festival.(Xinhua Photo)
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    BEIJING, Feb. 17 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu Jintao marked the eve of the Year of Boar by frying dough twists, eating steamed potatoes and cutting paper window decorations with poor farmers in the barren countryside of northwestern Gansu Province.

    On early Saturday, buses carrying Hu and accompanying officials rocked along the bumpy mountain roads to Daping village of Dingxi city in Gansu, where Hu once visited in 1999 and ordered local officials to work hard on poverty alleviation.

    "Dear villagers, I come to greet you a happy new year," Hu said, addressing a crowd of farmers in front of a village house. "I visited Daping eight years ago. Today, I am very pleased to see lots of changes. New houses are erected and plenty of food is stored, which shows the lives of the Daping people have really improved."

    In a villager's home, Hu sat with farmers and children, asking about grain production and the family income.

    One of the farmers gave the president a full basket of potatoes, telling him that, like many others, his life had improved by planting potatoes.

    The lunar new year of 2007, which starts on February 18, is also the Year of Pig. To most Chinese, the pig is considered a symbol of wealth and good fortune.

    But fortune comes slowly for farmers in barren Gansu. Last year, the income of each farmer in this northwestern province was estimated at only 2,100 yuan (296 U.S. dollars), far below the 3,587 yuan national average for the farming population.

    Hu has spent the previous three Lunar New Year eves visiting poor residents in the countryside. Last year, he fried rice cakes, drank home-made wine and danced with local villagers in rural Yan'an of Shaanxi Province, also in northwestern China.

    During the president's pre-holiday visit to Gansu, he made a stop at Huining, where three major corps of the Red Army joined triumphantly at the end of the Long March. Hu visited the site and the Long March museum and talked to a group of aging army veterans.

    "In the past, you fought hard under Chairman Mao's command and made important contributions to the victory of the Chinese revolution. The Party and the people will always remember you," Hu told the army veterans, one of whom burst into tears hearing the president's words.

    Hu then urged all Chinese people to elevate the spirit of Red Army veterans in the country's great cause of a new Long March -- the building of a well-off society and socialist modernization.

    In the previous evening, the president visited the province's academicians with the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Chinese Academy of Engineering, national model workers and representatives from all walks of life upon his arrival in Lanzhou, capital city of Gansu Province.

    Hu expressed his thanks to those people, saying they have made great contributions to the construction of a modern socialist country.

    The president then urged them to embrace the chance of develop-the West strategy and make new contributions to the modernization of Gansu Province.

    A day before Hu's visit to Daping, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao made his new year trip to low-income families in Fushun city, northeast China's Liaoning Province. It was Wen's second trip, in fewer than four year, to the city, one of the major coal mining centers in the country's old northeastern industrial base.

    At the home of 74-year-old retired worker Zhang Yuanzhou, Wen said Fushun city had contributed one billion tons of coal to the country since 1949, the year when New China was founded.

    "The Chinese government must solve the problems for workers in the old industrial base. The first step is housing. The second is employment," Wen said. "Harmony will not be achieved until people live a stable life and enjoy their work."

    Analysts said Chinese top leaders' repeated visits to the poor people this year show their sincerity in making commitments and the strong resolution to address the problem of common people, especially the most needy.

    The second day of the lunar new year, February 19, coincides with the 10th anniversary of the death of Deng Xiaoping, who unleashed the economic reforms in the late 1970s, benefiting many Chinese, especially those living in coastal cities. But unfortunately, the majority of 900 million Chinese peasants were largely left behind.


Editor: Luan Shanglin
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