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This is an archive article published on November 6, 2003

Train to the roof of the world

Beijing's plan to pacify Lhasa involves a $3.2 billion railroad that will connect the rest of China to the frozen Tibetan plateau known as ...

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Beijing’s plan to pacify Lhasa involves a $3.2 billion railroad that will connect the rest of China to the frozen Tibetan plateau known as the roof of the world. The railroad, billed as the world’s highest and due to be completed in 2007, represents the linchpin of China’s ambitious ‘‘Go West’’ campaign to develop and repopulate its impoverished hinterland.

But Tibetans opposed to Chinese control say the railroad’s construction—which began last year—has so far confirmed their worst fears: that the train, although it may usher in rapid progress, will transform Tibet’s desolate nomadic culture into a land of inequalities. ‘‘We went to inquire about railroad jobs but they said it’s all been taken,’’ said Tenzin, a 22-year-old Tibetan farmer from Gansu, formerly part of Tibet, but now a Chinese province. ‘‘We’ve been here four months and we can’t find anything. We’re willing to be waiters, security guards, tour guides, anything. But no one wants us.’’

The Chinese seem to have an extra edge. That’s because education and the ability to speak Mandarin Chinese are the basic criteria for most jobs. Tibetans have fought for preservation of their culture since China annexed their homeland in 1951.

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Beijing has tried to squelch the Tibetan independence movement by pumping in cash. It poured as much as $1.6 billion into the Tibetan economy last year alone, which officials say represented the largest investment in any province. ‘‘Tibet’s development is China’s development,’’ said Xiangba Pingcuo, Tibet’s governor. ‘‘We cannot allow Tibet to split from China. Nor can we allow it to remain backward.’’

Beijing says the railroad is the economic salvation that Tibet needs. ‘‘Tibet is the only province without a rail link. The people of Tibet want development. The railroad is the hope of everybody here,’’ said Tajie, the deputy mayor of Lhasa. The Chinese who live here feel they would be the main beneficiaries. ‘‘They’re probably building the railroad for us,’’ said Chen Yajun, 32, a taxi driver from central China’s Sichuan province. ‘‘It’ll be easier and cheaper to go home.’’

Some of the train’s first passengers will probably be its Chinese construction workers. Of the 38,000 hired for the job, only 6,000 are Tibetans. The rest were trucked in from inland provinces. Semi-skilled employees make as much as 11 times more money than manual laborers. None of the 2,700 workers who operate heavy equipment or hold supervisory jobs is Tibetan, according to Huang Difu, an official in charge of the project.

‘‘For the Chinese great leap west, they need skilled personnel,’’ said Kate Saunders, a Tibet specialist based in London. ‘‘Tibetans don’t have the vocational training to compete. So they bring in Chinese from the outside. It’s an important indication of the way the Chinese are carrying out development.’’

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Among the biggest losers of this lopsided gold rush are Tibetans hoping for a share of the riches transforming their city. ‘‘I feel sad for Tibet,’’ said Jonu, a 19-year-old Tibetan who came to pray at the Johkang temple. ‘‘So many Chinese are coming.’’ Lhasa already has the look and feel of a Chinese city, with Chinese-style buildings and Chinese billboards proliferating across town. More than half the 200,000 residents here are believed to be Chinese. Even the main boulevard in front of the Dalai Lama’s holy Potala Palace is named Beijing Road. Most of the people flocking to the palace are Chinese tourists. Officials hope the new train will bring more of them to boost the local economy. Even Chinese tourists, who come here expecting to see exotic Tibetan faces and snowcapped mountains, shake their heads in disbelief when they see the new Lhasa.

‘‘The tour guide told us about 80 percent of the people living here now are Chinese and most of them are from Sichuan,’’ said Liu Fuyou, 50, a tourist from the coastal city of Tianjin wearing a straw cowboy hat. ‘‘This is no longer Lhasa city, Tibet province. This is Lhasa city, Sichuan province!’’

Many Chinese settlers say they are relishing the economic opportunities provided by the railroad and other development. Lhasa, they say, is chock-full of jobs — unlike their inland provinces. ‘‘We’ve been here four years. I shine shoes, and my husband fixes bicycles,’’ said Guo Xinchun, 38, a mother of two from Sichuan as she scrubbed leather on the side of the massive square in front of the Potala Palace.

As the Chinese thrive raking in cash, the Tibetans seem to flounder. At the Lhasa night market, all but one of the vendors are Chinese. ‘‘Four years ago about 30 percent of us were Tibetan. Now we are the only one left,’’ said Ciren Zhuoma, 37, sitting in front of her small shop selling Pepsi T-shirts and Budweiser baseball caps. Her voice is barely audible above the piercing sound of live Chinese opera nearby. (LAT-WP)

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