With a new center to be built exhibiting cultural relics from
the Potala Palace, visitors will not have to spend days in line
waiting for tickets to the palace itself, said the Tibet Autonomous
Region Chairman Qiangba Puncog yesterday.
At a press conference held by the State Council Information
Office at Lhasa, Qiangba said an entire village at the foot of the
palace will be moved to make room for the center.
Once built, the center will give visitors a chance to get to
know about the palace from the cultural relics, photos and videos
in the center instead of entering the palace, thus better
protecting this cultural heritage, said Qiangba.
The dilemma of meeting the needs of tourists and protecting this
world cultural heritage site has become increasingly prominent
after the Qinghai-Tibet Railway was opened on July 1. The number of
tourists has soared to 390,000 in a month from July 1 to 31, a jump
of 50 per cent over the same period last year. Foreign visitors
accounted for 9.2 per cent.
Authorities in the region had anticipated the sharp rise of
tourists and adopted measures to admit as many visitors as possible
to the palace. The number of visitors each day has been increased
from about 1,300 to 2,300 by shortening the visiting time from
three hours to one and postponing the closing time from 6 pm to 7
pm.
Zhao Qing, a doctor from Guangzhou, was one of more than 130
visitors in a long queue for permits to buy tickets yesterday.
Although suffering from slight altitude sickness, she waited at the
entrance from 3 am yesterday for her chance to see inside the
palace.
Ticket prices, currently 100 yuan (US$12.5) each, have soared to
900 yuan (US$112) on the black market. To prevent the illegal
dealing of tickets, a number with Tibetan language is written on
the hands of those getting permits for buying the tickets, and
visitors must show their ID cards when buying.
For local Tibetans who come to pray at the palace, a ticket is
just about 10 yuan (US$1.25). But local Tibetans are not likely to
grab a big share of tickets from tourists, as they usually come at
slack season in winter, according to a guide named Zhuoma.
Zha'nuo, deputy director of local tourism bureau, suggested that
tourists may also come in winter, when the average daytime
temperature is around 8 C, to avoid the crowded peak season in
summer.
Qiangba said the utmost concern at present is protection of the
1,300-year-old palace, which is undergoing a second major series of
repairs. In the process of repairing, new structures have been
discovered repeatedly because no design for the palace was
available.
(China Daily August 8, 2006)