LHASA, Nov.18 (Xinhua) -- Southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region will
spend 29.85 million yuan (about 4.39 million U.S. dollars) to construct a new
child welfare complex in downtown Lhasa, the regional capital.
The announcement was made Monday by an official surnamed Li, chief of the
welfare affairs section of the autonomous regional department of civil affairs.
The complex will be on Niangre North Road of Lhasa and will serve as an
extension of the existing Tibet child welfare house in western Lhasa, which is
the first of the kind in Tibet, said Li.
The planned establishment will have 300 beds and a floor space of 11,950
square meters. Construction will start next year and will be ready for operation
by 2010.
Altogether 150 orphans and disabled children now live at the Tibet child
welfare house, which was built in 1999 with aid from the Ministry of Civil
Affairs.
Tseyang, head of the Tibet child welfare house, said the existing facility
didn't have space for special education and rehabilitative training, which was
not a good situation for the growth of disabled children.
Also, many of the orphaned boys and girls who are kept together because of
limited space have reached puberty, said Tseyang, who added that the present
condition made it inconvenient to look after the children.
Planned works for the new orphanage will include a children's activity
center and another center for rehabilitation training.
There were 5,073 orphans and disabled children in Tibet by late 2007, and
only six government-financed child welfare services. They house 9.8 percent of
Tibet's orphans and disabled children, according to the regional department of
civil affairs.
Four other private welfare facilities and one SOS children's village, also
privately funded, have played a role in accommodating Tibet's disabled,
according to Li.