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Qungdag found the outside world entirely different
when he walked out of the Prison of Tibet Autonomous Region
after serving his 8-year term there.
Skyscrapers, billboards and shop windows with a
dazzling array of goods flanked the former simple
street.
"I was greeted by a
new environment, in which there was fierce competition, but
no discrimination," said Qungdag, who is famous in his
community for getting rich through honest
work.
Qungdag, 40, is a native of
Dapchi County in Lhasa City. He was sentenced to an
eight-year sentence in 1987 for illegal activities and was
discharged in 1995 after serving his term in
prison.
"Soon after I was
released, I felt at a loss. I had no job and stayed idle for
a while," he recalled.
Later,
he found that the local government encourages individuals
into private enterprise. The commercial, public security and
taxation departments provide favorable conditions for those
who start a legal business.
Persuaded by his relatives, Qungdag opened a teahouse in
Lhasa, capital of Tibet Autonomous Region. Business soon
boomed.
"I built up experience in business management
when I served as a member of the prison catering management
committee. And it worked in running the teahouse," he
said.
The prison catering
management committee is an organization composed of
prisoners. The job helped make Qungdag familiar with price
fluctuation laws in buying grains and vegetables and taught
him accounting and food budgeting.
Finding that shopping was inconvenient in Dapchi County,
Qungdag opened his first shop in his hometown, selling tea,
butter, alcohol, and cigarettes etc. When mechanized farm
tools became popular, he started selling farm
machinery.
The government of Deqen
County, where another of Qungdag's shops is located, asked
him to set up a jointly owned shop and invited him to be
general manager.
So far Qungdag
has opened three shops which have combined assets of 240,000
(28,915 U.S. dollars) yuan. Their daily sales range in value
from 6,000 (720 U.S. dollars) to 7,000 (840 U.S. dollars)
yuan.
The rise in sales depends on
improvements in the living standards of local residents. At
first, he had only a few customers and they used to buy
cheap goods, he said. Now, customers look out for the brand
and quality of products.
"I
benefited a lot from the skills and managerial experience I
learned in prison. More importantly, I realized it was
stupid to commit the offences for which I was jailed,"
he said.
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