Special Report: Qinghai-Tibet Railway
LHASA, July 1 (Xinhua) -- A whistling train rolled
off the station of Lhasa, regional capital of Tibet at 11:12 on Saturday,
enabling Tibet for the first time to have access to rail transport.
The train, coded "Tibet 2", carries about 700
passengers with 16 carriages. It runs more than 2,100 kilometers across "the
roof of the world" and is expected to arrive at the terminal of Lanzhou,
provincial capital of Gansu, in some 30 hours.
Xie Yuke from Qinghai provincial railway
administration, 35, was assigned as the driver for the train's maiden trip.
Among the passengers are Tibetan herdsmen, farmers, retired governmental
officials, builders of the railway and journalists.
President Hu Jintao attended a launching ceremony
held at Golmud, another start-off point of the landmark railroad in northwestern
Qinghai Province, and cut red ribbon for the opening of the railway.
"The building of the Qinghai-Tibet railway is of
great significance for accelerating the economic and social development of Tibet
and Qinghai, improving the lives of people of every ethnicity, and strengthening
unity between ethnic groups," said Huto more than 2,600 audiences at the
ceremony.
"This is a magnificent feat by the Chinese people,
and also a miracle in world railway history," he said.
Zhou Yongkang, state councilor and member of the
Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China,
presented at another celebration held at the Lhasa Railway Station and waved
farewell as the train moved.
More than 2,000 merrymaking people hailed the
historic moment at the square in front of the newly-built two-story Lhasa
Railway Station, which stands on the south bank of the Lhasa River, 30
kilometers from the holy Potala Palace.
"Tashi Delek! (Good Fortune in Tibetan) We have
waited for this moment for so long and today, the dream came true," said
Wangzhag, a villager came to the station for celebration from Liuwu Town of
Doilungdeqen County.
"I believe the trains will bring us fortune and
blessing," said the 51-year-old Tibetan farmer, who is formally dressed in a
scarlet traditional Tibetan suit with a hada, a white silk scarf symbolizing
respect and blessing, on his hands.
Cering Lama from famous Jokhang Temple in Lhasa was a
special guest invited to experience the maiden trip of the train "Tibet 2".
"I planned to visit the Ta'er Monastery in Xining,
now it saves me much more time to be there by train," said Cering. The Ta'er
Monastery is a holy place in memory of Tzongkapa, founder of Gelugba, or yellow
sect of Tibetan Buddhism some six century ago.
For 54-year-old tourist Er Ting, who came to Lhasa
from northeastern Heilongjiang Province a week ago, his dream of traveling the
snow-covered plateau by train also came into reality on Saturday.
Er spent 368 yuan (46 U.S. dollars) to buy a berth
ticket from Lhasa to Golmud, the first ticket sold at the Lhasa Railway Station.
However, he did not even sit down in the bed for a while after he was aboard.
"I'm too excited to sit down because I don't wanna
miss any beautiful scenery," he told Xinhua, looking at the views through the
window.
The train has specially designed cars with oxygen
supplies to help passengers cope with the thin air and window filters to protect
people from ultraviolet rays. High-tech cooling systems are to keep permafrost
under the rail bed frozen and stable.
"It is clean and comfortable here," said Zhang Ziyan,
a second-grade student from the Beijing Primary School in Lhasa, who is also the
youngest passenger on the train.
The eight-year-old boy, who was born in Lanzhou, now
walked back and forth along the aisle at the Carriage Four, looking around
curiously.
Zhang's parents both work in Lhasa and the family
used to spend about three days and nights through highway back to Lanzhou.
"If possible, I want to go to Beijing this summer by
train because my dad told me the trip just took two days," said the boy.
The Qinghai-Tibet Railway, also the world's longest plateau railroad, stretches 1,956 kilometers from Qinghai's provincial capital Xining to Lhasa. The section of 814 km from Xining to Golmud began operation in 1984 and the Golmud-Lhasa section started construction on June 29, 2001.
It will carry 75 percent of all the inbound cargo into Tibet, cutting transportation costs and boosting local economy, according to the Railway Ministry.
The Qinghai-Tibet Railway will stretch from Lhasa to other regions of Tibet, including Xigaze, Nyingchi and Yangdong, in five years, according to the ministry. Enditem