China should push "toilet revolution": Xi
China should continue to upgrade the country's toilets as part of its "toilet revolution" aimed at developing domestic tourism and improving people's life quality, Chinese President Xi Jinping said in Beijing.
File photo of Chinese President Xi Jinping. [Photo: Xinhua]
The construction of clean toilets is an important part of pushing urban and rural civilization, and more efforts should be made in both cities and rural areas to upgrade toilets, Xi said in a recent instruction on the achievement of toilet revolution carried out in the tourism sector.Along with toilet revolution, China should construct better public facilities and services to boost the tourism industry, Xi said.
Xi has long stressed the importance of the toilet revolution in enhancing the quality of the tourism industry. Officials are urged to make consistent efforts and take tailored measures to tackle long-standing issues and correct bad habits in tourism.
Local authorities are now more aware of the important role toilets play, believing better toilets are not only beneficial for tourism, but can also improve the environment that people work and live in, and enhance the overall level of civilization of society.
While visiting rural areas, Xi used to ask local residents about the conditions of the toilets they use, and stressed many times that clean toilets for rural residents are important for the building of a "new countryside."
China launched a toilet revolution across the country in 2015 with an aim to make such facilities cleaner and more regulated.
Toilets in the countryside and at tourist sites previously had a bad reputation.
A public toilet in Taiyuan, Shanxi Province is equipped with an ATM, a vending machine and provides free Wi-Fi. [Photo: VCG]
In rural areas, some toilets were little more than makeshift shelters surrounded by bunches of cornstalks, and some were open pits next to pigsties. At tourist sites, visitors were angered by insufficient toilets, unhygienic conditions and lack of sanitation workers.
By the end of October this year, China had installed or upgraded 68,000 toilets at tourist destinations, 19.3 percent more than the target number.
The toilet revolution has been expanding gradually from tourist sites to cover the whole country, from cities to rural areas.
The country planned to install or upgrade another 64,000 toilets at tourist destinations from 2018 to 2020, according to an action plan released by the China National Tourism Administration.