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Nomadic Herders Vanishing in China
Leta Hong Fincher
Golmud,
Qinghai Province
1 Aug 2001 13:13 UTC
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[ VOA ]In China, nomadic
herders are quickly vanishing as the government moves ahead
with settlement programs it hopes will speed the development
of the poor western regions. One such place is the province of
Qinghai, bordering Tibet, where Mongolian and Tibetan nomads
have herded for centuries.
In China, nomadic herders are
quickly vanishing as the government moves ahead with
settlement programs it hopes will speed the development of the
poor western regions. One such place is the province of
Qinghai, bordering Tibet, where Mongolian and Tibetan nomads
have herded for centuries.
Inside his felt tent on the
Qinghai-Tibet plateau, 19-year-old herdsman Mengke presses the
"play" button on a rickety tape recorder, and a plaintive
Mongolian melody fills the air.
I was born in a herder's home,
the folksong goes. The boundless grasslands are my cradle, and
raised me to be a man. I am a Mongolian, who loves the land.
Mengke himself recorded this
song in May, paying a studio in Inner Mongolia $1,500 of his
life savings to produce tapes that he hopes to distribute both
there and in his native province, Qinghai, which extends east
of Tibet.
Mengke says there's nothing
he'd rather be than a herder. All his life, he and his family
have moved five or six times a year. They are nomads with a
herd of more than 800 sheep, 20 horses, a dozen camels and
other animals.
Within the next year, the only
life he has known will come to an end. As part of China's
western development policy, the Qinghai provincial government
has given his family almost $4,000 to build a brick house. In
exchange, Mengke, his parents and two siblings have agreed to
settle down on a fixed plot of land.
The government says there are
almost 800,000 Mongol and Tibetan herders in China's far
western Qinghai province. And it plans to finish settling all
of them within the next 10 years.
The vice-governor of Qinghai
province, Baima, says one of the most important goals of the
western development campaign is to raise the income of herders
and farmers. He says that last year, the average income of
herders in Qinghai was just $180 a year, compared with an
average urban income of $625. These low incomes make Qinghai
one of the poorest provinces in China.
The vice-governor says that
settling nomads in the area will help increase everyone's
quality of life. He describes Qinghai as virgin land, waiting
to be explored.
But critics say China's
policies on nomads do not necessarily make economic or
environmental sense. Kate Saunders of the London-based Tibet
Information Network says the government is imposing the
cultural biases of the majority Han Chinese on minority Mongol
and Tibetan herders, without evidence it will enrich anyone.
"What you're doing is that you're taking away the flexibility
from the nomads' lifestyles, which means that animal
populations can fluctuate wildly according to the changing
needs of pastoral nomads," she says. "So what we found is that
resettling the nomads thus risks further grassland degradation
and it risks overgrazing of grassland pastures."
Ms. Saunders says government
subsidies will not cover the additional costs nomads face in
settling, including things like paying for shelters for their
animals.
Take Gengzangjia, is a Tibetan
herder and father of three, who has settled on the grassy
plateau near Qinghai Lake. He says that when the government
started its western development drive, he was given $1,100 to
build a winter shed for his animals. But he still had to pay
$725 himself, more than twice his average income of $300 a
year.
Gengzangjia says that in the
last few years, a severe drought has caused the quality of his
grass and crops to deteriorate. But he is unable to move his
animals outside his allotted land for better pastures.
The government insists it is
acting in the interests of local herders. The deputy head of
Qinghai's Foreign Affairs Office, Wang Yi, says that winter
blizzards often decimate the animals of nomadic herders. After
the nomads settle, he says, they have more protection from
natural disasters, and better access to social services.
But the young Mongolian nomad,
Mengke, has no desire for protection from the elements. He's
still waiting for the Inner Mongolian record company to send
him 2,000 tapes of his songs about the wild nomadic tradition.
Mengke plans to sell them for $1 each. By the time his tapes
arrive, Mengke and his family will likely be settled in a
brick house, with a fenced plot of land, trying to cultivate
vegetables in the barren Qinghai desert.
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