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XINING, March 19 (Xinhua) -- China has decided to spend 93 million yuan (about
11.6 million U.S. dollars) to better protect the country's first nuclear weapons
research and production base in Northwest China's Qinghai Province, according
to local official sources.
The money will be used in building exhibition halls, renovation of ruins of the
former atom bomb base and improvement of the local natural environment,
according to the Qinghai Provincial Cultural Heritage Bureau.
The Publicity Department of the Communist Party of China Central Committee
has decided to allocate 10 million yuan to fund the protection project.
Covering more than 1,100 square km, the former atom bomb base was the birth place
of China's first atom bomb and first hydrogen bomb. It was built in 1958 and
was closed by the government in 1987 to support its demands for a complete ban
and the destruction of all nuclear weapons in the world. The retired atom
bomb base was handed over to the local government in 1993.
Xihai Town, the current name for the base, will be turned into an
exhibition center which displays the birth and growth of China's first atom tomb
and hydrogen bomb, and the devotion of Chinese scientists to the scientific
research, said a local official.
"The retired base was expected to become a platform for spurring the
patriotic spirit of the general public," said Ma Weimin, deputy head of the
Qinghai Provincial Cultural Heritage Bureau.
The "nuclear city" was put under state key protection in 2001 and it opened
to visitors in 2003.
Tests show that environmental factors in the locality meet international
standards. Enditem |