China Defends Tibet Plans
(www.tibet.com | March 10, 2003)
China says it is determined to step up economic development in Tibet,
despite environmental concerns.
In a new policy document, the government said that it attached
tremendous importance to the environmental protection of Tibet,
which China has ruled since 1959. It even dubbed the controversial
Qinghai-Tibet Railway project an 'ecologically-friendly railway'.
But critics dismissed the report as propaganda, and said that
in reality the economic development of Tibet was damaging its
environment. The lengthy document outlined a number of environmental
initiatives, which it said complemented the economic development
of Tibet. It pointed out that Tibet had one of the least polluted
environments in the world, and that not one species in Tibet had
become extinct in more than 50 years since China took control of
the region.
Although public statements single out environmental priorities, in
reality they come way behind strategic and economic concerns. Kate
Saunders, Tibetan specialist
But it said that environmental concerns should not check economic
development and criticised supporters of the Dalai Lama and
"international anti-China forces" for trying to restore "backward
feudal serfdom" to the region.
"Camouflaging themselves with pretensions of concern about
eco-environmental protection in Tibet, they want really nothing
but to hamper the social progress and modernisation of Tibet",
it said. But Kate Saunders, a UK-based Tibet specialist, dismissed
the report as propaganda.
She told BBC News Online: "Although public statements single out
environmental priorities, in reality they come way behind strategic
and economic concerns".
Railway Link: The construction of the 1,140 km Qinghai-Tibet railway,
which will connect the Tibetan capital Lhasa with Golmud in Qinghai,
is another area of contention. Tibet is rich in various minerals
including coal, aluminium and zinc, which have been difficult to
exploit because of poor transport links to the region.
The building of the railway, which is due for completion in 2007,
would change that and allow for more efficient extraction and
distribution. Although the government report says that environmental
concerns wee central to the railway's development, Ms Saunders said
that the Ministry of Railways itself admitted in 2001 that the
impact on the ecosystem would be negative. She also said that
another reason for the building of the railway was to allow swift
troop movements to China's western frontier.
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