Alibaba.com is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source Coconut Oil, Acer , Air Bike, Children Furniture , Cane Sugar, Nissan, Costume, Dell, Wallpaper, Gsm Phone, Transfer Paper, Swimwear, Vending Machine, Faux Fur, Laptop, Milk Powder, MAP, Scooter, Candy, Artificial Flowers, Greeting Card, Photo Album, Hair Dye, Billiard Table, Data Cable, Silk Fabric, Cultured Stone, Slippers, Sports Equipment, Wood Flooring, DVD Case, Audio, Computer Mouse, T Shirt, Granite, Packaging, Tube, Toy and Thong
Railway breaks seclusion, spurs investment in Tibet
www.chinaview.cn 2006-12-10 10:40:28

    by Xinhua Writers Jia Lijun & Zhou Yan

    LHASA, Dec. 10 (Xinhua) -- People say it's still early to list the changes brought by a railway five months after it became operational, even if it is on the "roof of the world".

    The subtle changes the Qinghai-Tibet Railway has brought to southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region lie in the increasing number of shops and restaurants, in the flocks of tourists coming to share Tibetan culture and in the eyes of local children, who, fascinated by the rumble-tumble of passing trains, long to see the wild world beyond the confines of the Kunlun Range and the Tanggula Mountain.

    In one word, the railway to Tibet, believed by many to be a "mission impossible", has broken the humdrum life on the plateau.

    The launching of the railway, one of the breaking events in China this year, was praised by Chinese president Hu Jintao as a "magnificent feat" in China's history of railway construction, as well as a "great miracle" of the world's railroad history.

    Hu himself cut ribbons to mark the launching of the railway on July 1, the day that coincided with the 85th founding anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party.

    The railway runs 1,956 km across the frozen tundra of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau from Lhasa to Xining, capital of the neighboring Qinghai Province. It has linked Tibet ever so closely with the rest of China, carrying more than 650,000 passengers to and from the region between July 1 and Nov. 30, according to the Ministry of Railways.

    In the first 10 months of this year, Tibet received a record 2.25 million tourist arrivals from home and abroad, up 31.8 percent from the same period of last year.

    The regional tourism bureau expects the figure to top 2.6 million for the whole year.

    The railway has boosted the service sector and allowed farmers and herders, who make up 80 percent of the region's population, to try non-agricultural jobs selling souvenirs or waiting on diners.

    Some of them have taken maiden train rides to the inland provinces on business or sightseeing tours.

    Experts say the opening of the railroad plus the subsequent reopening of Nathu La Pass on the China-India border will help pave a new Silk Road to south Asia and build up regional harmony and prosperity.

    OUT OF TIBET

    Some better-off Tibetans are seeking to travel to the inland areas now that the tough winter climate has made their plateau home unpleasant even for the locals.

    More than 100 people applied in two days when a senior citizens' center in Tibet's regional capital Lhasa solicited locals to join in an "out of Tibet" train tour to Lanzhou, Xi'an and Beijing for 4,000 yuan (500 U.S. dollars). The organizer decided they had to go in four groups instead of one.

    Regular train services to big cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou have forced airline companies to offer discount tickets for the first time after years of monopoly on the route.

    Balo, a Tibetan retiree from the regional communication bureau, is planning to take a train to Beijing at the end of the year. He has two important places to visit: the Tian'anmen Square in the city center and Beijing Film Academy where one of his grandsons is studying for a master's degree.

    In 1951, when the Chinese Communist troops led by Mao Zedong peacefully liberated Tibet and started a reform to abolish serfdom, the region had no road on its 1.2 million square kilometers of land. "Only Lhasa had a dirt lane for mules -- and that ran for just one kilometer," said Balo.

    In 1972, Balo spent more than a month on horseback on a 3,000-km expedition from Lhasa to Ngari Prefecture in the western outback. "Come to think of it: it's amazing a train ride to Beijing takes just 48 hours and even a sleeper ticket costs only 30 percent of an air ticket."

    A train trip from Lhasa to Beijing on hard seat costs 389 yuan (49 U.S. dollars) and a sleeper ticket sells for 813 yuan (102 U.S. dollars), compared with 2,430 yuan (305 U.S. dollars) by air.

    With easier access to traffic and a tuition-free primary and junior high education, Tibetan parents would tell their children "work hard and try to get into an inland school".

    Some schools in inland provinces and big cities including Beijing have Tibetan classes that teach putonghua, or standard Chinese, and offer a better education that would pave the way for Tibetan children to go to university.

    Though this has never occurred to Puncog Gunce even in his wildest dreams.

    The 17-year-old Tibetan boy in Nagqu county of northern Tibet spent his childhood as a shepherd and started primary school only this year. "My dad had to send me to school because the government said parents who fail to do so will be fined 3,000 yuan (375 U.S. dollars)."

    He's not sure how long he would stay at school. "I'll be too old when I finish nine years of compulsory education. I might as well get some trendy clothes from the more developed east and open a little garment store here."

Editor: Wang Yan
E-mail Us  
Related Stories
News Feature: Tibet's caravans steer on road to riches
Qinghai-Tibet Railway carries first batch of ex-servicemen home
Chinese gov't continues favorable policy in Tibet