Special report: Dalai clique's separatist activities
condemned
BEIJING, April 2 (Xinhua) -- Tibetan farmers are not
being marginalized amid the region's economic progress, a study by a Chinese
researcher reveals.
Zhalo, a scholar of ethnic studies with the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) think tank, said here on Wednesday that a
research program on Tibet's economic development was conducted in 120 Tibetan
villages over the past eight years.
"We have found no marginalization of Tibetan farmers
in the process," said Zhalo, himself a Tibetan.
He said Tibetan farmers' income was mainly from four
sectors: traditional activities such as stock breeding and herb collecting and
new ones like construction and service.
"In traditional sectors, the Tibetans nearly face no
challenge at all," Zhalo told a press conference.
"We have been especially concerned about the
Tibetans' involvement in the new sectors," he said. "We found that in the
infrastructure construction sector, although the boss of a construction team
might be from neighboring Sichuan Province, the workers were nearly all local
Tibetans."
He attributed this to the fact that many Tibetans
lacked the relevant knowledge and had to go through a learning process.
"However, the Tibetans are very good at learning," he
said. "We've found in our research many Tibetan entrepreneurs with Han and Hui
people working for them. The Tibetan people are well involved in different
sectors and different levels."