Authorities in south-west China have vowed to come
to the aid of an isolated mountain village after photographs emerged showing
the petrifying journey its children are forced to make to get to school.
To attend class, backpack-carrying pupils from
Atuler village in Sichuan province must take on an 800-metre rock face,
scrambling down rickety ladders and clawing their way over bare rocks as they
go.
Images of their terrifying and potentially deadly
90-minute descent went viral on the Chinese internet this week after they were
published in a Beijing newspaper.
The photographs were taken by Chen Jie, an
award-winning Beijing News photographer whose pictures of last year’s deadly
Tianjin explosions were recognised by the World Press Photo awards earlier this
year.
Chen used his WeChat account to describe the moment
he first witnessed the village’s 15 school children, aged between six and 15,
scaling the cliff. “There is no doubt I was shocked by the scene I saw in front
of me,” he wrote, adding that he hoped his photographs could help change the
village’s “painful reality”.
Chen, who spent three days visiting the impoverished
community, said the perilous trek, which he undertook three times, was not for
the faint of heart. “It is very dangerous. You have to be 100% careful,” he
told the Guardian. “If you have any kind of accident, you will fall straight
into the abyss.”
So steep was the climb that Zhang Li, a reporter
from China’s state broadcaster CCTV who was also dispatched to the mountain,
burst into tears as she attempted to reach Atuler village. “Do we have to go
this way?” the journalist said as her team edged its way up the cliff face. “I
don’t want to go.”
Api Jiti, the head of the 72-family farming
community which produces peppers and walnuts, told Beijing News there had been
insufficient room to build a school for local children on the mountaintop.
But the perils were evident. The villager chief told
the Beijing News that “seven or eight” villagers had plunged to their deaths
after losing their grip during the climb while many more had been injured. He
had once nearly fallen from the mountain himself.
The trek to school is now considered so gruelling
that the children have been forced to board, only returning to their
mountaintop homes to see their families twice a month.
Villager Chen Jigu told reporters the wooden ladders
used to move up and down the mountain were, like the village, hundreds of years
old. “We replace a ladder with a new one when we find one of them is rotten,”
he said.
More than 680 million Chinese citizens have lifted
themselves from poverty since the country’s economic opening began in the 1980s
but grinding poverty continues to blight the countryside.
In Atuler village, residents reportedly live on less
than $1 (70p) a day.
President Xi Jinping has vowed to completely
eradicate poverty by 2020 by offering financial support to about 70 million
mostly rural people who survive on less than 2,300 yuan (£240) per year.
“Although China has made remarkable achievements seen across the world, China
remains the world’s biggest developing country,” Xi told a poverty-reduction
conference last October. But experts say that number does not take into account
the existence of a forgotten class of “new urban poor” that emerged after tens
of millions of Chinese workers were laid off in the late 1990s ahead of China’s
entry into the World Trade Organisation.
In a recent interview, Dorothy Solinger, a political
scientist and urban poverty expert from the University of California, Irvine,
said she believed there could be as many as 40 million urban people still living
below the poverty line in China’s cities. “In the cities there is new poverty
and they don’t talk about that,” Solinger said. “The city poor have been
pacified [through limited cash handouts] and I think that satisfies the central
government … They are not helping them escape poverty. They are helping them
stay minimally alive.”
Here, you have a similar situation in Nigeria and many other African countries.
This might not be your home country but be sure, the situation isn't totally different in where you are.
The change start from you.
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