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China
Ernest Kao

Opinion | Party chief sacked for making villagers buy mobile phones to 'raise intelligence'

He told them owning a mobile phone would “raise their intelligence” and get them out of poverty, but was later accused of colluding with a county telecoms provider.

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Although priced at a subsidised rate, each mobile phone reportedly costs about 200 yuan.

The party secretary of a village in central China’s Gansu province was dismissed from his position after he had implemented a failed policy that “forced” villagers to buy mobile phones if they wanted to qualify for social relief, state media reported on Monday.

His initial argument was that owning a mobile phone would “raise their intelligence” and get them out of poverty, but he was later accused of colluding with a county telecoms provider to sell phone cards and mobile phones to villagers, China Network Television (CNTV) reported.

“[Villagers] need to know what’s going on in China. They need to be informed,” said the Zhangxian village party secretary Qian Caiping in the CNTV interview. “Some of them barely have any idea what went on at the 18th party congress.”

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Although priced at a subsidised rate, each mobile phone reportedly costs about 200 yuan (HK$250) – a substantial amount for households in a county where GDP per capita is just 1,600 yuan per year, roughly half the national average. The “huimin card”, as it was called, charged 0.8 yuan per minute.

“It was difficult. I had to borrow money from my brother to buy the phone,” said villager Feng Yumei, in an interview with CNTV, CCTV's web-based TV channel.

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Feng, who was suffering from heart disease and could barely make ends meet, said she was afraid that if she didn’t buy the phone, she would fail to qualify for dibao, a 100 yuan stipend for low-income rural households.

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