LHASA, March 26 (Xinhua) -- China's central
government will invest more than 100 billion yuan (12.9 billion U.S. dollars) in
180 projects in Tibet by 2010, the regional government announced on Monday.
Though it had reported five consecutive years of GDP
growth of more than 12 percent, Tibet remained one of China's most
underdeveloped regions due to its harsh natural conditions and a weak economy,
and it relied heavily on investment, said Qiangba Puncog, chairman of autonomous
region.
The projects, covering infrastructure construction,
education, social security and environmental conservation, would promote
economic and social development, showing the central government's support for
the region.
Approved by the State Council, China's cabinet, in
January, the projects would see 80 percent of Tibet's villages connected by
road, safe drinking water for all its 2.76 million people and free education up
to high school for all children, said Hao Peng, the region's vice chairman.
The funding would help pay for power plants and
telecommunications facilities in remote villages and to protect natural forests.
The construction of the region's fourth airport in
the northern Ngari Prefecture was also included, said Hao, but he did not
elaborate.
"Most of these projects are designed to improve the
living conditions of the people, especially farmers and herdsmen, and to help
them share fruits of the reform and development in Tibet," said Hao.
The central government launched an aid program in
Tibet in 1994,under which cadres from other parts of China are selected and sent
to Tibet to work, and large sums are also invested in the region.
Puncog said the central government invested more than
63 billion yuan (8.13 billion U.S. dollars) in large projects like the
Qinghai-Tibet railway and infrastructure upgrading from 1994 to 2005 and aid
from other provinces over the same period was worth more than 7.76 billion yuan
(one billion U.S. dollars).
The annual GDP growth of Tibet reached 13.4 percent
last year, bringing the region's total GDP to a record 29 billion yuan (3.74
billion U.S. dollars) with the per-capita GDP above 1,000 U.S. dollars.
In addition, the annual per-capita net income of
Tibetan farmers and herdsmen stood at 2,435 yuan (314 U.S. dollars) in 2006, an
annual increase of 17.2 percent.
"We have set a target to raise the per-capita net
income of farmers and herdsmen to the national average by 2010," said
Puncog.