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Qinghai -Tibet Railroad Nearing Completion
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=F27054:3919ACA

But critics fear this highest rail link in the world will help Beijing
tighten its grip on Tibet and further marginalize Tibetans in their
own homeland





A trial train of Qinghai-Tibet (Golmud-Lhasa) railway runs near the
peak of Kunlun Mountain Pass at 4,767 meters (15,731 feet) of altitude
After four years of construction across some of the world's most
rugged terrain, a new railroad connecting China's far western Qinghai
province with Tibet is close to completion. Beijing says the project
is an important part of its campaign to develop China's poor western
region. But critics fear the rail link will help the government
tighten its grip on Tibet, and further marginalize Tibetans in their
own homeland. Siska Silitonga recently visited the region's capital,
Lhasa, and has this report.

Hundreds of construction workers at the Lhasa River Bridge put the
finishing touches on a section of an 1,100-kilometer railroad linking
the region to the rest of China via Qinghai Province.

At the moment, two roads are the only land routes from China proper
into Tibet, which forms China's southwestern corner. Once this
railroad has been completed, the currently long and tortuous trip from
Beijing to Lhasa will be cut to a relatively simple 48-hour journey.

This ambitious project began in 2001 and, as chief engineer Wang Wei
Gang explains, many technical difficulties had to be overcome.

"There are three major difficulties: the high altitude and lack of
oxygen, the deep frozen earth and the fragile ecology," said Wang Wei
Gang.







Passengers travelling to Xining above the destination sign -
"Xining-Golmud," at the train station in Golmud City in the western
Chinese province of QinghaiBillions of yuan have been poured into the
project. The Chinese government says the rail line will bring Tibetans
more opportunities and greater access to the outside world.

Xu Jianchang, vice director general of the Tibetan Development and
Reform Commission, says the local economy will benefit.

"Tibet is rich in water resources, but if we want to sell water to
other provinces, we have to use trucks or buses," said Xu Jianchang.
"After the rail is constructed, the local resources can be transported
at much lower costs."

However, critics fear the railroad will mean more than just goods
entering and leaving Tibet.

Since the launch of the government's "Go West" campaign in the late
1990's, China's western provinces have seen a massive influx of people
of the country's ethnic Han majority.

According to the Tibetan government, each year about 50,000 migrants
flock to Lhasa, a city now of 250,000. Once trains start running into
Tibet, the region is likely to see an increase in ethnic Han job
hunters. Tibetans say this will make it even harder for them to get
jobs, and will erode their culture and identity.

The Han look on Tibet as a place of opportunity.

Zhang Keping has opened a convenience store in Lhasa, leaving her
three-year-old son in adjacent Qinghai Province. Despite the
separation, she is confident she will soon be able to provide a better
life for her family than she could in Qinghai, where jobs are scarce.

"There isn't much work in Qinghai other than working as a farmer,"
said Zhang Keping. "That's why I chose to come here. Many of my
friends have come to Lhasa, and we all make good money. I don't plan
to go home. What work is there for me back there? I haven't even been
back once."

Most Tibetans are farmers, and lack the skills needed to work in
offices or start businesses. Many of them cannot speak Mandarin,
China's national language.

Mr. Xu of the Tibetan Development office says the government is
spending nearly $2 million a year on new training projects to help the
Tibetans compete with the newcomers.

"We are only in the beginning stage," said Mr. Xu. "Starting from last
year we are spending 15 million yuan [$1.9 million] annually for these
training programs. Mainly to train the villagers to increase their
knowledge and technical skills."

But many Tibetans still worry about the influx of Han Chinese.

Tserin is a Tibetan taxi driver in Lhasa.

"If you can't speak Chinese then there's no way you can find work,"
said Tserin. "Life in Tibet is getting harder, look around, all the
Han people are running the businesses here. Lhasa is full of them."

A souvenir hawker outside a Lhasa hotel is blunt when asked about the
Han Chinese.

Speaking in Tibetan and using hand gestures, he pushes down his head
to demonstrate that the Han are suppressing the locals.

Their incomes are different, too. The Han usually earn a good living
from restaurants, massage houses, and karaoke bars. The Tibetans -
many still clad in traditional costume - earn much less selling local
crafts or farm products. In the bigger towns, Tibetan beggar children
flock around tourists.

China began a decade-long conquest of Tibet in 1949. A Tibetan
government-in-exile, led by the region's spiritual leader, the Dalai
Lama, is based in India, and has tens of thousands of supporters
around the world who oppose Chinese rule.

Many Tibetans think the Qinghai Railway will do more than help Han
Chinese migrate to the region - they say it will help the Chinese
government consolidate its power over Tibet.