30 years on, new reform plan could reverse rural revolution
A small riverside township in the eastern province of Anhui has become the recipient of intense media attention during the usually quiet 'golden week' holiday.
President Hu Jintao visited historic Xiaogang village where 30 years ago a secret land division agreement signed by 18 local farmers triggered rural, and later widespread, economic reform, which has transformed the country.
Three decades later, top leaders in Beijing found themselves battling negative effects of that reform, analysts say.
Now a buzz is growing for what is shaping up as another milestone moment when communist leaders meet next week for their plenary session to iron out a new rural reform plan, which could be seen as reversing what they did 30 years ago.
'In recent years, we peasants have become clearer that farming individually cannot bring us a prosperous life,' Yan Hongchang , a Xiaogang villager was quoted by Xinhua as saying. 'It's an inevitable trend to amass the land and combine production forces.'
Responding to market opportunities, the farmers are now, according to Guan Youjiang , head of the villagers' committee, 'trying to explore a new way of getting rich, just as we did 30 years ago'.