The Qinghai-Tibet railway which will undergo trial operations on
July 1 will not only link Tibet with other parts of China but also boost
border trade on this plateau, local government sources said
Wednesday.
According to the Trade Bureau of Tibet Autonomous Region, the
newly-built railway will help step up trade with Nepal and India,
and thus render Tibet as the frontier for Southern Asian economic
communication.
Yadong is one of the major border ports in Tibet. Although it
locates 460 kilometers away southwest from the autonomous regional
capital Lhasa, the government sources said that the railway with
the destination in Lhasa would bring more and better goods as well
as opportunities to this region.
Lhasa is not the final end of the railway. Experts have draw a
blueprint that in the future a railway network will be created with
Lhasa as its center, which will extend to different regions
including the border areas of Tibet.
"The railway will shorten Tibet's distance to the world," said
Wei Houkai, a research fellow with the Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences.
Yadong is 300 kilometers from Bhutan's capital city Thimbu,
and600 kilometers from Dacca, capital of Bengal. In addition to
that, the connection point of a railway network in India is only
dozens of kilometers from the port.
Among other border ports in Tibet as well as other provinces or
autonomous regions in western region of China, Yadong is the
nearest to the sea.
Avinash Datta, who works for Mahindra company, one of the top 10
biggest enterprises in India, said that he felt exciting when
hearing the completion of the railway.
He said that the railway will help improve Tibet's agricultural
production and create a bigger market for investors from India.
Another Indian business man whose surname is Singer said that a
railway can impose widespread influence beyond certain areas. He
said that the improvement of transportation conditions will help
increase Tibetan people's income and boost consumption power, and
Indian business people thus will bring more commodities to
Tibet.
"I have heard that the railway will continue to be built and
finally connected with a railway in India. That will bring more
opportunities for us," he said.
The 1,956-kilometer-long Qinghai-Tibet railway runs across the
frozen tundra of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau from Lhasa to Xining,
capital of Qinghai Province.
When completed, it will be the highest and longest highlands
railroad in the world and the first railway connecting the Tibet
Autonomous Region with other parts of China.
The current highways linking Tibet and outside regions transport
passengers and carry mainly foodstuff, wood, energy materials,
industrial products, and mining items in and out Tibet.
The railway will help promote local economy and border trade in
the region by stimulating more profitable sectors such as tourism,
mining industry, vegetable processing and Tibetan medicine.
The preparation for July 1 trial operation of passenger train
service on Qinghai-Tibet Railway is underway.
(Xinhua News Agency June 22, 2006)