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Relocating from 'paradise'

China Daily Africa | Updated: 2017-09-01 09:19
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Shepherds agree to leave their mountain retreat as the government attempts to lift them out of poverty with new housing

Every June and July, shepherds living in the village of Kraz Tasha at the foot of Muztage Peak on the Pamir Plateau in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region travel across deep valleys along the ancient Silk Road to a mountain retreat.

The Pamir Plateau, called Congling in ancient China, is 3,000 meters above sea level, but the shepherds' "paradise" is at an altitude of 4,100 meters and is called tie ri zi wo zi, or Summer Ranch.

After a 10-hour trek, the herdsmen arrive at their destination, where the green grass looks like a blanket on a hillside.

However, the fairyland has no electricity, no internet and no cellphone signal.

Most of the herdsmen have an annual income of less than 2,500 yuan ($375; 315 euros; 290). So, in order to alleviate their hardship, the local government decided that by 2020, all of the poverty-ridden households will be relocated to Aketao county.

There, they will be provided with free housing and vegetable greenhouses.

Although the villagers love their mountain retreat, they support the relocation decision.

"We have survived in a such a harsh environment. So we should be able to adapt when we come down from the mountains to a completely new life," one 30-year-old villager says.

Xinhua

 

A group photo of the herdsmen at the summer ranch. For most of them, it is the first time they have been photographed. Photos by Jiang Wenyao / Xinhua

 

The village head leads the herdsmen to wade across the river; with a stick and a net, villagers set up a volleyball court.

 

Villagers get together to share food; scrambling for a sheep is a traditional game played on the horseback.

 

A folk song ritual in the Kirgiz neighborhood; cow dung is used to light a fire.

(China Daily Africa Weekly 09/01/2017 page4)

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