Just Hide It… The China Poverty Solution

Some officials in Gansu Province have cleaned up their cities and villages in an innovative way.

In Yongjing County, in northwestern Gansu Province, more than two kilometres of walls were built flanking one side of a major road. Unlike sound insulation boards in cities, these walls are not used to reduce traffic noise in roadside village homes, but to hide them from sight of drivers and passersby.

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The brick and cement wall, painted into purplish blue and red, emerges even more conspicuous among the khaki-coloured loess hills. Behind the two-metre-tall wall, is a sprawl of villagers’ houses and yards, which are roughly built with mud. In some areas of this impoverished county, 70 per cent of residents or more are living under the national poverty line.

According to a local farmer, the project started in late 2006, when officials of the county ordered the construction of the wall alongside the road reaching Lanzhou, the provincial capital.

“It’s nicer to look at, so people won’t see how shabby our homes are from the road,” villager Zhang Ping said. In front of her house was a sheepfold and a pile of firewood. She said she had no money to renovate the house or build a new one, so the local government tried to disguise the scene with a wall of cement.

The wall, dubbed an “official loincloth” by villagers, has made their lives more inconvenient. Villager Zhang Tianzhi has had to close his roadside shop after the wall was finished, and he even had trouble entering his own home.

From early 2006, the central government urged local officials to build a new countryside and to improve farmers’ living conditions. However, some local governments, in pursuit of “political achievements”, prefer easy and instant ways to make the region look developed.

“Building walls is to beautify the villages,” a vice governor of the Yongjing County said. Last year in a poverty-alleviation plan of the county, “building 1,200 metres of a cultural wall” is mentioned as one of their projects, and the “cultural wall” is exactly what is standing there now.

(中国日报)

By Sun Tzu on 18-04-2007

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Comments (4)

  1. Comment by Jaleo

    April 22nd, 2007 at 9:58 pm

    Wouldn’t it make more sense to spend money on providing the people with building materials to make themselves nicer looking homes rather than to spend lots of money on a big wall to hide them :x

  2. Comment by Heather

    July 21st, 2007 at 9:40 pm

    I know…

  3. Comment by Cent changes coins

    July 25th, 2007 at 3:21 am

    That’s China for u Ladies & Gentlemans!!!!!

  4. Comment by Stephen

    November 14th, 2007 at 10:14 pm

    Whilst the Chinese Government seems to have the right intentions, local officials have too much freedom to interpret them as they like and the result the above photo.

    In Xinjiang, many of the ancient towns and cities have huge throughfares ploughed through them and garish chinese apartment blocks lining the roads. Behind them traditional mud-brick roads lurk so as to give the impression of a prosperous Silk Road.

    the Governement should realize that people are not stupid, and they will get further by trusting the people and working with them to improve their lives. Nobody likes to live in Squalor as you’ve just mentioned above, so why justing hiding the poor with a blanket is not going to solve the problem in the long term.

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