Wednesday, March 18, 2009

China to build railway to northwestern Tibetan prefecture

HEZUO, Gansu Province, March 18 (Chinese media) -- A railway linking the Gannan

Tibetan Prefecture in northwestern China's Gansu province to its capital Lanzhou

is to be built, announced local authorities on Wednesday.

Construction of the 174.2 kilometer long railway will cost 8.75 billion

yuan (about 1.3 billion U.S. dollars).

Work will begin at the end of this year and is expected to be complete in

three years, said Li Zhiyong, an official with the Gannan Prefecture Commission

of Development and Reform.

"We hope the railway could finish earlier," he said.

According to Li, the exact route of the railway will be decided before this

May. It is expected to handle trains with speeds of 160 kilometers per hour

after its completion.

With a population of 680,000, 54 percent of whom are Tibetans, the

prefecture in southern Gansu covers 45,000 square kilometers.

"We have no railways, flights and water carriages," said Mao Shengwu, head

of the prefecture. Mao noted that road traffic was the only mode of

transportation they had.

"Poor transportation has hampered development in the prefecture," he said.

Li Zhiyong said the aim of the new railway was to boost the local economy

where stock breeding is the main industry.

Li listed some numbers: if local people wanted to carry out beef and mutton

by roadway, cost for each ton per kilometer was 0.8 yuan. When the railway

opens, the cost should drop to 0.1 or 0.15 yuan.

The railway could also help develop tourism, he added.

Gannan boasts the 300-year-old Labrang Monastery, a center of the Gelug

Sect of Tibetan Buddhism. It also has a swamp on the national protection list,

Li said.

Jigshegya, a 25-year-old Tibetan man living in Luqu county, had never

traveled by train.

"There is a song called 'heavenly route' on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway," he

said. "It described the happiness of people in Lhasa when the railway opened to

traffic in 2006. Now the 'heavenly route' is coming to my home."

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