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The research director for the government-backed China Tibetology Research Center, Lian Xiangmin, told the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post in a report Saturday that widening the development focus to other Tibetan areas was a major policy change. Reports on the Tibet meeting gave no details on how much money would be poured into the region, but Hu said the per capita income of Tibet's farmers and herdsmen should be close to the national level by 2020, Xinhua reported. As of last year, it was barely one quarter of the national average of around $2,000 a year, according to the government. China this month appointed a former soldier as Tibet's new governor, reasserting hardline policies there in the face of resentment over political restrictions and perceived economic exploitation. But the governor's post is largely ceremonial. Tibet policy is formulated at the highest levels of China's central government under Hu, who was Tibet's party boss from 1988 to 1992.
[Associated
Press;
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