Transportation upgrade puts villagers on road to riches
Improvements to the local infrastructure have resulted in higher incomes and better lifestyles. AYBEK ASKHAR reports from Yibin, Sichuan.
Hard times
Local resident Zhang Debin said: "It was hard for farmers to walk up and down with full baskets on their backs. Sometimes, they had to pay porters when the tea they grew was ripe."
The 43-year-old operates a tea-processing plant in Pingshan county, which is under the jurisdiction of Yibin, a mountain-encompassed city in southern Sichuan.
He said the only proper road for vehicles ran through Yibin, and while it was fine in good weather, mud made it impassible after rain.
"Poor transportation facilities affected communication with the outside world, and the inhabitants of this place lacked almost everything: food; clean water; gas; you name it," Zhang Debin said.
"In the past, the standard of living was low for many people in the county."
Until 1983, about 60 percent of county towns in the province were inaccessible to automobiles, so most places relied on human and animal power for transportation, he added.
- Aircraft carrier Fujian, commissioned
- Erdos offers 10,000 yuan subsidy for families having third child
- Qingdao conference promotes fair and rational global economic order
- China commissions CNS Fujian in Hainan province
- Beijing launches program to foster international entrepreneurship
- China starts construction of water diversion project to quench thirst of metropolis































