|
Beware of turning blind eye to losses Li XingChina Daily Updated: 2005-12-08 05:49
Dinner tables for banquets at restaurants and hotels are being booked.
Theatre seats for ballet shows or variety gigs are being reserved.
As the year draws to its end, it is time to tally achievement scores and
celebrate.
Governments at various levels, especially, are expected to issue reports
summarizing, for instance, the percentage rise in gross domestic product (GDP)
and per capita income increases, as well as the completion of numerous
public-concern projects.
The public will applaud the accomplishments, as some of the GDP increases
have come from new roads, new community services and medical establishments, or
investment in cleaning the air and environment.
However, the public should demand a genuine account of what sacrifices the
people as well as the environment have sustained while these goals are being
realized. The governments also should offer an authentic explanation of whether
their undertakings will bring long-term benefits to the people, society, the
Earth and even to the country's cultural heritage.
For instance, industries registered an increase of 11.1 per cent in
value-added productions in the first three months, according to the National
Bureau of Statistics.
However, in the same period of time, some 1,159 coal miners perished in 40
gas explosions or floods, according to the State Administration of Work Safety;
this is not the total number of deaths in coal mine accidents as only those that
killed 10 or more miners were counted.
This year, the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) has been
monitoring some 21,949 industrial plants, which are likely heavy polluters. In
September, it reported that, in the first six months, these plants discharged 5
per cent more sulphur dioxide and 22 per cent more smog.
In the same report, SEPA also claimed that the discharge of solid waste,
waste water and some chemical pollutants into the atmosphere and river systems
saw a "significant" decrease. But that "decrease" has been tarnished as the
administration is still grappling with the serious benzyl spill in the Songhua
River caused by an explosion at a chemical plant of Jilin Petrochemical
Corporation in Jilin City.
Meanwhile, we learn from medical professionals that the number of people
suffering from lung or breast cancer or from various heart and coronary diseases
continues to rise. We have yet to know how much more common people must spend on
medical care and children's education, even though many already complain that
medicines for a light cold cost several hundred yuan and the family of a retired
teacher who died in the ICU of a hospital in Harbin of a serious coronary
disease paid up to 5.5 million yuan (US$680,000) for 67 days' emergency
treatment.
While we see more fancy hotels and office buildings springing up and new
squares opening, we are saddened to see cities and towns lose their own
traditional fabric and charm...
All the above facts and happenings should keep the public as well as the
governments at all levels sober when the achievements are scored and tallied.
We should not only look at how much more we have recouped for revenue, how
many more cars or much coal we produce and how fast the economy as a whole
grows.
We should check and re-evaluate the losses in terms of human lives, the
degradation of the environment, and the disappearance of our cultural and
community tradition as well and find ways to make up for what we lose.
Email: lixing@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily 12/08/2005 page4)
|