People in Tan Cuong village, Tan An commune (Chiem Hoa) develop brocade weaving.
The road lined with Party flags and National flags led us to Tan Cuong village, Tan An commune (Chiem Hoa), where 20 Dao ethnic households, Yen Hoa commune (Na Hang) resettled 20 years ago. It is unbelievable that in the new hometown, the work that women used to do just to serve their personal needs can now be a source of livelihood. Ms. Ban Thi Giang continuously shuttled with her hands and smiled: "Previously, in the old hometown, every house had a loom for the women in the family to weave fabric to make clothes and clothes for family members. Thereforem when I turned to new area, thanks to this craft, can earn money and support my family."
Chairman of Tan An Commune People's Committee Ma Doan Duc said that currently the commune has a policy of turning products from the traditional weaving profession of the Dao Tien people in Tan Cuong into products for tourism. Currently, a number of products such as indigo fabric, women's costumes, and bags made by Dao Tien women in Tan Cuong have been sold at Ban Ba waterfall tourist site. In the long term, the commune will establish a Club to preserve and preserve national costumes here and open more vocational training classes to create new products, more suitable to the needs of people and tourists.
Downstream to Muong village, Phu Luu commune (Ham Yen), prosperity is also being built by resettled people at Tuyen Quang hydropower plant. Mr. Hoang Van Biet, one of the households resettled to this Muong land, said that on the first day of coming here, everyone was worried because everything in this place was new and the production conditions were different from many old hometowns. Many people at that time still wanted to return to their old hometown! But the State has invested in asphalt roads, concreted the rural road system, solidified irrigation canals, built electricity and clean water projects, construct schools, and houses; Train and transfer scientific and technical advances in cultivation and animal husbandry suitable to actual local conditions. According to him, in the past, resettled people were unfamiliar with orange and lemon trees, but now they have mastered the process of growing fruit trees. His family, which only knew about planting forests, now knows how to grow orange trees following VietGAP and organic directions.
People resettled in Minh Huong commune (Ham Yen) harvest VietGAP oranges.
Muong village head Ho Van Chieu shared that the village has 37 resettled households, mainly Tay ethnic people. Life is still difficult in the new days, but with the care and support of the State along with the efforts, exploration, and learning of good and new things from the local people to apply in production, the resettled people quickly adapted and caught up with the new lifestyle. The head of Chieu village boasted that 100% of resettled households did not have anyone on the list of poor households, many households have become rich from orange trees, lemon trees, and service businesses.
Comrade Nguyen Van Dinh, Director of Tuyen Quang Hydropower Migration and Resettlement Department, said that in order to take good care of the lives of resettled people, the province has focused on investing in infrastructure construction. Resettlement areas: Electrical works, roads, schools, clinics, village cultural houses; allocating residential land and production land to resettled households; compensation, support and resettlement for households subject to adjustment and supplementation; support training and career change; supporting the development of production and life. To date, over 1,700 project items have been built, 3,917 resettled households have been allocated residential land and production land. The attention of the province and the government Locally, especially with the efforts of the people, a new and full life has existed in every house and village. Another new spring brings with it faith, plans and wishes for prosperity in the newly resettled hometown.
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