Off the property ladder: China clifftop villagers relocated in anti-poverty drive
Village of Atulie’er gained worldwide fame for precarious ladder journey 800 metres up a cliff face
Children climb steel cliff ladders to get in and out of Atulie’er village, Sichuan province, China. Photograph: Imaginechina/REX/Shutterstock
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Atulie’er village in Sichuan province drew worldwide fame in 2016 after images emerged of the residents climbing perilous rattan ladders – some hundreds of years old – up the cliffside to reach their homes.
The publicity prompted authorities to replace them with metal ladders,
and the village, where the Yi people have lived for generations, soon
became a tourist drawcard.
Now, 84 households are moving to a newly built housing complex 70km
away, state-backed media CGTN reported. About 30 households are believed
to be staying behind and working in tourism.

The steel ladders were installed after the village gained worldwide fame. Photograph: Imaginechina/REX/Shutterstock
“My children won’t need to climb up and down the cliff for education any
more,” Atulie’er resident Mose Labo told CGTN. “My wife is pregnant
with our third child, moving here makes it very convenient for us to go
to the hospital for examination.”
The new community was built as part of Xi Jinping’s target to eliminate
poverty by 2020, and is expected to house about 18,000 relocated people
in total.
Schools and hospitals are also being built, according to the report.
The furnished housing is likely to have been subsidised, according to the BBC, and China Daily reports each individual must pay 2,500 yuan ($350) for the move.

The old ladders were becoming unsafe. Photograph: Imaginechina/REX/Shutterstock
Leo Lan from Chinese Human Rights Defenders questioned whether Chinese
authorities had considered the need to take care of the extra financial,
social and cultural burdens of the relocated residents.
“It may seem to be doing good for the villagers to move to the urban
areas, but the consequences can be difficult for them,” he told the
Guardian. “The financial burden of living in urban cities is huge for
people coming from poor villages.”
Yaqiu Wang, a China researcher for Human Rights Watch, said it was
unclear whether there was adequate consultation with the Atulie’er
residents, and “the Chinese government has a history of carrying out coercive relocation and rehousing programs, especially in minority areas”.
“It’s important for authorities to have meaningful, transparent
consultation with affected groups of people, and community concerns are
taken into account in such government anti-poverty projects.”