Tourism lifts poor community
Local government has poured 230m yuan into improving infrastructure
Dakdong village, deep in the mountains of Lhasa, capital of the Tibet autonomous region, used to be poverty-stricken but now reaps millions of yuan every year as a major rural tourism destination, featuring peach picking, camping and a hot spring.
Nyima Yudron, 31, used to live in a stone house in the village with six family members, including two children, her parents and a younger brother.
She and her husband, Yan Yongming, a decorator in urban Lhasa, recently paid 140,000 yuan ($20,000) for a new two-story, 100-square-meter house.
One reason that was possible is that Nyima Yudron is no longer a housewife, and instead works as a property management assistant for a tourism company, earning 3,200 yuan a month.
She said she is satisfied with her life: "The children study at school for free. I got a job near my home so that I can take care of the elderly."
- Beijing Daxing Airport's international traffic passes 13 million in past three years
- Yuyuan Lantern Festival puts Shanghai in festival mood
- Cargo ship capsizes off Hainan coast, two crew missing
- China's Shenzhou XXI astronauts in good health, science goals on track after 3 months in space
- Sixth episode of photo series explores stunning landscapes across Hebei
- 19 people jailed over deadly 2023 Beijing hospital fire
































