New emigrants welcomed
17/8/2004 14:21
A group of 556 migrants from the Three Gorges Project site arrived in
Shanghai yesterday as the last batch of farmers who were relocated to the city
to make way for the giant hydroelectric dam. Their arrival will bring the
total number of local Three Gorges emigrants to 7,519 since the first group
arrived in 2000, according to the Shanghai Three Gorges Emigrant Resettlement
Office. This latest group of 159 families from Chongqing Municipality arrived
at the city's Baoyang Wharf at 6:20am yesterday after a five-day voyage along
the Yangtze River. The migrants, aged four months old to 86 years old, will
be resettled in the city's suburban Nanhui and Fengxian districts, officials
said. "We are very thankful to your contribution made to the Three Gorges
Project and you are guaranteed to have a new good life in Shanghai," said Mayor
Han Zheng who welcomed the migrants at the wharf yesterday morning. The 90
billion yuan (US$10.8 billion) hydroelectric facility is the world's biggest
infrastructure project. Construction on the dam started in 1999. These people
are among 1.2 million farmers and rural residents who have been or will be
relocated from the Three Gorges since 2000 to 11 provinces along the Yangtze
River and the east China coast regions, due to the project. As compensation
for the resettlement, each family moving to the city will be given a new home -
ranging in area from 120 to 180 square meters depending on the number of
members, as well as a small patch of farmland for each person. Local
residence permits will also be granted to migrant families and children will get
free schooling for two years, according to the migrant resettlement
office. Officials also said that about two-thirds of migrant families who
arrived earlier have lived up to local living standards. "I'm very glad to
regard Shanghai as my second hometown," said Xu Jibo, 43, whose family is among
the first batch of migrants to settle in the city's Chongming County. "Despite
the relatively high living standards here, I'm still quite optimistic that I can
overcome difficulties to build up a new family."
Yan Zhen
|