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Online food ordering a hit in Urumqi during Ramadan
Source: Xinhua | 2016-06-14 15:48:07 | Editor: huaxia

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A delivery driver on his way to a customer's address in Urumqi. (Xinhua photo/Du Gang)

URUMQI, June 14 (Xinhua) -- Online-food ordering (OFO) services in the northwestern city of Urumqi have reported a surge in orders as Muslims observe the holy month of Ramadan.

"Ordering food for 'iftar' [the breaking of the fast] is an attractive option after a day of fasting," Aliyar told Xinhua as he ordered food from a halal OFO service on the instant messenger service WeChat.

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Shewkret, founder of Aykire, an online-food ordering service in Urumqi. (Xinhua photo/Du Gang)

According to its founder Shewkret, his service has received up to 70 orders every day since Ramadan began.

"I've built a kitchen exclusively for the OFO service so that I could have more control over food quality and work flexible business hours," he said.

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Cooks prepare food in Aykire's kitchen in Urumqi. (Xinhua photo/Du Gang)

Ma Hongguang, an ethnic Hui Muslim who owns a restaurant that specializes in mutton pilaf, has over 100 online orders every day from his "invisible customers."

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A customer receives her food after she orders online. (Xinhua photo/Du Gang)

Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region is home to more than 13 million Muslims who fast between sunrise and dusk during Ramadan, which ends on July 6 this year.
 
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China to accelerate Tibet's clean energy development
Source: Xinhua 2016-06-17 16:37:10

LHASA, June 17 (Xinhua) -- China will speed up the development of clean energy in Tibet Autonomous Region from 2016 to 2020, under the principle of "putting the environment first," according to an energy official.

The initiative will boost the local economy and increase strategic reserves of clean energy, Nur Bekri, head of the National Energy Administration, said on Thursday at a conference on Tibet's energy development held in the regional capital of Lhasa.

The government will construct new hydropower projects to meet local demand, the official said.

In addition, the government encouraged the utilization of solar power, including photovoltaic generation, and called on companies to explore the abundant geothermal sources in Tibet.

Research will be carried into the feasibility of a pipeline to transport petroleum and natural gas from Golmud City in Qinghai to Lhasa.

By the end of last year, installed power capacity and power generation in Tibet increased by 136 percent and 75 percent, respectively from the 2010 levels, and the number of people having access to the main electric grid rose by around 33 percent from the same period.

Also, the share of clean energy in the region's total energy consumption climbed to 43.3 percent by the end of 2015 from 31.9 percent in 2010.
 
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Patriotic indeed! These herdmen help to protect the border from infiltration by undesirable elements.

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Around China: Taking livestock to summer pasture in Xinjiang
Source: Xinhua 2016-06-16 21:24:36

URUMQI, June 16 (Xinhua) -- In China's remote western Pamirs, wealth is measured not in money or houses, but in sheep and cattle.

Every year, the herdsmen move their livestock between summer and winter pastures to "maintain and increase the value of assets."

Kirgiz herdsman Sulayman, 26, lives in Atjiayili Village, the closest Chinese village to the border with Afghanistan, in the Wakhan Corridor, an area with an average altitude over 4,000 meters.

He is going to move 200 sheep to a summer pasture in a valley 25 kilometers away with his family.

The transfer is divided into two groups. One is led by Sulayman, who drives a jeep carrying his mother Aterhan and aunt Gulqal. They will arrive ahead of the livestock so they can set up yurt, prepare food and build the sheepfold.

Sulayman says they must also put up a smaller sheepfold for the lambs. "The lambs have to be separated with their mothers in the evening or they won't have enough milk in the daytime."

The long distance and the high altitude make the transfer of livestock arduous, but the young, weak and old animals are well cared for. Three lambs less than two months old are also taken in the jeep.

In the past, horses were the main form of transport for the herdsmen and their belongings, but the jeeps make the journey easier and quicker, says Sulayman.

On arrival, Sulayman and the two women set up beds and stoves, and then Aterhan makes lunch - yak meat with potatoes, and naan, a staple food of Xinjiang, and a nutritious brick tea.

The other group - uncle Qurbaneli and sister Huryet - is leading 200 sheep. Huryet is taking part in the transfer for the first time. She insists on walking.

At 5:30 p.m., nine hours after they set off, the sheep come into view of the encampment. Sulayman greets his uncle and sister, and counts the sheep - all are present. Sulayman smiles on seeing the sheep in the sheepfold.

From now till October, Sulayman and his family will graze sheep on the pasture and help protect the border. Although they are not professional border guards, they can observe movements there.

May and June are the busiest time in the Wakhan Corridor as herdsmen in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region take their livestock to summer pasture at higher altitudes.

Nomadic herdsmen spend their lives following the water and pasture. The transfer provides cattle and sheep abundant food and enables the grassland to renew itself.

It is near dusk when Sulayman finishes work. He estimates his earnings for the year. "I get a subsidy for help protecting the border. Taking the subsidies and sales of sheep into account, I could earn more than 20,000 yuan (3,036 U.S. dollars) for the year," he says.

"As long as the border area is stable, our life is settled."
 
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Hydro-power resumed in Tibet, 1 year after Nepal quake
Xinhua, June 19, 2016

Two hydro-power generators are turning again in the border county of Gyirong, southwest China's Tibet, one year after they were damaged in the 7.5-magnitude quake that struck Nepal.

The two generators provide electricity enough for household use for 10,000 people in 25 villages.

Two other generators in the power plant are expected to be repaired this year, said Ta Qing, a county official.

The devastating quake on April 25, last year, which claimed heavy casualties in Nepal, also left 26 dead in Tibet. The tremors triggered landslides on both sides of the border cutting off electricity, road transport and telecommunications.

The Gyirong Power Station, installed with a capacity of 4,000 kilowatt, was built in 2013 to satisfy the power use in the county and the customs. The plant was built to end local residents' dependence on wood for fuel.
 
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The following is taken from a Malaysian newspaper. The reporter was on a trip sponsored by the Chinese government. He is one lucky dude...

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A New Road for Xinjiang
BY THEAN LEE CHENG
Sunday, 19 June 2016

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Vibrant and colourful: Xinjiang hopes the world will start to see the region differently with the new developments and economic initiatives. There is so much more to the region than ethnic clashes, like this Tartar dance at a house party for visitors in a Uyghur village there.


With its new economic zones and startup aspirations, the revived region wants to show its diverse face to the world.

SINCE 2009, Xinjiang has been portrayed as a place of unrest and tension by the Western media, with Muslim Uyghurs struggling for more autonomy. But Xinjiang is more than Uyghurs. Although it is known as Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, there are several autonomous prefectures and counties within its border where other minority groups converge.

With a population of 23 million, China’s largest administrative division has about 50 minority groups – 13 main ones with Muslim Uyghurs and the Kazaks being the two largest.

During a recent 12-day visit to its capital Urumqi and other towns and cities, what was more evident were the developments currently taking place, from the village level right up to the new economic and technological zones and high speed train system.

Xinjiang’s days begin early and end late. Daylight stirs at 4.30am and the sun slips away only at about 10.30pm on most nights we were there. Working hours can be long, especially in villages where money is scarce and there are mouths to feed. Construction workers, whether building a retaining wall, a village road or bridge, continue to work even pass 8.30pm, as long as a pair sunglasses is still needed.

“They want to take advantage of daylight,” says interpreter Zhang Jienian.

The visit, sponsored by the Chinese government, was both revealing and educational, due to Xinjiang’s varied tapestry of ethnicities, cultures, economic developments and natural landscapes.

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Futuristic-looking Silk Road Tourist Centres and high speed train station in the Urumqi Economic and Technological Development Zone.


One Belt, One Road

In the last several years, much has been written about China’s boom-bust property market due to it being the world’s second largest economy. There is overbuilding and over-investment in different parts of China.

So it is relevant at this juncture to give a glimpse of this sector in Xinjiang itself, against the backdrop of Beijing’s “One Belt, One Road” economic initiative.

Unveiled in 2013, its objective is to raise the economic standards of the Chinese, irrespective of creed and religion. China is a secular state.

Because of Xinjiang’s location in the furthermost northwest – it borders Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Russia and Mongolia – and despite the slowdown in the Chinese economy, it is getting special attention from Beijing.

It is seen as a window to Central Asia. This explains the multi-level developments in what is known as the “New Frontiers”.

See the real Xinjiang for yourself, not what you read in the Western media,” says a government official.

Indeed, from the building of new villages for minority groups, upgrading of tourist destinations and the installation of a high speed rail system, the spectrum of new projects is astonishing.

The construction of Urumqi’s transport system is expected to impact the capital and the province most. Urumqi’s metro rail, to be completed in 2018, will link different parts of the city. The high speed train system about 15km outside the city will link it with other Chinese cities and Central Asia.

As the dry desert wind makes its presence felt in a press briefing held under the scorching sun at the site of high speed train station, High Speed Rail Development Investment Co director Zheng Wei Min outlines the project to reporters from 23 countries its significance against the backdrop of China’s One Belt, One Road economic initiative.

“It parallels the ancient Silk Road,” says Zheng.

While that ancient trading route saw the exchange of silk, spices, livestock and slaves, the new Belt Road route will be a precursor of much more, he says.

“It will link China, countries in Central Asia and China’s immediate neighbours and Europe,” says Zheng. It will open up the transportation of both goods and services and travelling along that route. Just as the Silk Road opened up oases of activities and societies of different milieu along the way, its adaptation will mean much more in today’s digital age.

A network of rail and road systems beginning from China’s coastal cities in the east will replace camels as the normal transport mode. There will also be a sea route which passes by Southeast Asia, Sri Lanka, Africa, up the Suez Canal and on to Athens. The train station involves an investment of 22 billion renmimbi while the rest of the commercial area around it will cost some 127 billion renmimbi, Zheng says. The station will be the focal point of the development while Silk Road Tourist Centres, resembling little round space ships, will front the station. Other commercial developments will be within walking distance of it.

The train station is expected to have 115,000 passengers daily, excluding those passing through by 2020. By 2030, this is expected to rise to 155,000, he says.

Industrial and software parks are located in the periphery. Despite the overall slowdown in the Chinese economy, Zheng and other government officials agree that Beijing-based central government will not let up on its development in Xinjiang. “This underscores its seriousness in getting the Belt Road initiative off the ground,” says Zheng.

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With a population of 23 million, Xinjiang has about 50 minority groups including the Kazaks, the second largest ethnic community - which businesswoman Jengisgul Nuordanaken is part of. - Photos by THEAN LEE CHENG


Incubating startups

At the Xinjiang Software Park Co Ltd, also located at the Urumqi economic zone, its chairman Bi Zhong Hua says companies will be able to leverage on the transport links.

“We will be able to help companies enter Central Asia and beyond as our software park will also be modelled on a multi-language platform. The big cities in eastern China tend to focus on English and Mandarin. We will be focussing on multiple languages. Research and development is the other focus,” he says, adding, “Xinjiang’s diverse groups will offer our neighbours a free flow of expertise. It will be two-way, win-win situation for China and our neighbours.”

Bi says overall development of the software park is to promote everything related to the Internet of Things (IOT). The incubator-concept of the project was conceived in 2010 and the building housing the startups was completed last year.

“Our aim is to attract 200 startups. There should be sufficient synergy. Hopefully, some will become big corporate names later,” he says. Bi says the government-initiated project will accord quite a number of privileges to those who set up their base there.

With a slow volatile global economy and China’s slowing growth – off its double digit peaks of the 1990s/2000s – China is seeking other sources of growth. The Belt Road initiative will help to jump start the different sectors of its economy and its geographically vast landscape.
 
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Foreign Investment Booms in Chongqing
2016-06-26 19:04:31 | CRIENGLISH.com | Web Editor: Meng Xue

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A bird view of the Liangjiang Special Economic Zone in Chongqing. [Photo: kaiwind.com]

The creation of a Special Economic Zone in the southwestern Chinese municipality of Chongqing is being credited with creating a major influx of foreign investment through new funding streams, tax breaks and favorable policies, which are designed to try to speed up economic development.

On the 33rd floor of a modern skyscraper in the heart of Chongqing's financial district you'll find the offices of ENGIE – a Sino-French venture which develops electricity, cooling and heating services for industrial companies.

Doctor Zhang Jinbai is the company's Chongqing representative.

"Chongqing is really the hot topic in China and a lot of foreign investors, and not only foreign investors, domestic investors entering the Chongqing market – how we can find a balance to allowing the foreign investors to invest and in the meantime to balance the interests of the different parties."

Zhang says the potential for growth, as well as the flexibility within the municipality areas of policies and finance, has been key to the company's development in China.

"Chongqing is the most dynamic city in China and also the Chongqing government has just signed the Sino Singapore initiative demonstration program here and located in Chongqing so we think there are a lot of opportunities, airport, IT, financial activities, and as an energy player we think we can bring our exercise and our capability of investment."

Financial service is one of four priority areas of the China-Singapore initiative which focuses on connectivity and modern services.

There are currently 246 Singaporean companies doing business in Chongqing, making the city-state the biggest investor in the Chongqing among all foreign investors.

Wu Shicun is with the Singaporean Business Association in Chongqing.

"There are several advantages in Chongqing. First, this is a very big municipality with a big population and land base. More importantly, the government has given a lot of encouragement to us in doing investment projects here. Also with the operation of Yuxinou railway, there has been great improvement in the field of logistics, international finance and trade."

That government encouragement is channeled through the Liangjiang Special Economic Zone – one of only three in China – behind only Shanghai's Pudong New Area and Tianjin's Binhai.

It was set up in June 2010, and is located in the main urban districts of Chongqing, north of the Yangtze River and east of the Jialing.

The zone itself covers 12-hundred square kilometers.

Automobile production, electronic information and equipment manufacturing have been the three major industries driving economic growth in the zone.

But in the next five years, another 10 new industries are expected to rise in Liangjiang.

They include intelligent vehicle manufacturing, smart devices, cloud computing, and bio-medicine.

Tang Zongwei, deputy director of the management committee of the Liangjiang New Area, says they have a lot of ambitions moving forward.

"In terms of adjusting the industrial structure, our goal for the Liangjiang New Area is that by the year 2020, the output value of the three traditional industries will reach 600 billion yuan, while the output value of the other new, emerging industries will reach 450 billion yuan. Within the new industries, we want to achieve 80 billion yuan in new energy vehicle manufacturing."

The figures speak for themselves…

The GDP of the area was put at 320-billion yuan in 2015.

By 2020, officials expect the Liangjiang New Area's GDP to hit 650-billion yuan, with industrial gross output coming in at 1 trillion yuan.
 
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A bird view of the Liangjiang Special Economic Zone in Chongqing. [Photo: kaiwind.com]

Is this Manhattan in the making?

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Largest water amusement park in NW China



Workers are checking up on the delivery of the Fangzhou Water Amusement Park in an industrial area in Minle County, Gansu Province. It is expected to open to the public in early July of this year. [Photo by Wang Jiang/China.com.cn]



Workers are checking up on the delivery of the Fangzhou Water Amusement Park in an industrial area in Minle County, Gansu Province. It is expected to open to the public in early July of this year. [Photo by Wang Jiang/China.com.cn]



Workers are checking up on the delivery of the Fangzhou Water Amusement Park in an industrial area in Minle County, Gansu Province. It is expected to open to the public in early July of this year. [Photo by Wang Jiang/China.com.cn]



Workers are checking up on the delivery of the Fangzhou Water Amusement Park in an industrial area in Minle County, Gansu Province. It is expected to open to the public in early July of this year. [Photo by Wang Jiang/China.com.cn]




Workers are checking up on the delivery of the Fangzhou Water Amusement Park in an industrial area in Minle County, Gansu Province. It is expected to open to the public in early July of this year. [Photo by Wang Jiang/China.com.cn]




Workers are checking up on the delivery of the Fangzhou Water Amusement Park in an industrial area in Minle County, Gansu Province. It is expected to open to the public in early July of this year. [Photo by Wang Jiang/China.com.cn]




Workers are checking up on the delivery of the Fangzhou Water Amusement Park in an industrial area in Minle County, Gansu Province. It is expected to open to the public in early July of this year. [Photo by Wang Jiang/China.com.cn]
 
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Xinjiang loans for impoverished families
Source: Xinhua | June 30, 2016, Thursday |


Xinjiang will offer a maximum of 50,000 yuan (US$7,521) for every impoverished household, free of mortgage or guarantee, Wang Yanlou, deputy director of the regional Finance Department, said yesterday.

Applicants can obtain the loans a week after they apply, and can reapply after three years again, he said. The regional government has ordered lower governments to establish a special fund to support the new credit policy, he said.

About 2.61 million people in Xinjiang — less than 10 percent of the region’s population — live in poverty. A shortage of funds is a major obstacle, Wang said.

“Banks usually demand guarantees or mortgageable assets, thus barring a great number of people from getting the money they need,” he said.

Most households have nothing to mortgage and cannot find anyone to vouch for them.

“We want to use the loans to encourage people to start their own businesses and find proper means for living,” he said.

Amatgang Sidiq, a 38-year-old sheep farmer in Akto county, said the loan can help him raise more livestock. He suffered losses during a steep fall in sheep prices in 2014.
 
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Qinghai-Tibet Railway Benefits People in Tibet in Multiple Ways
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2016-06-30 08:20:31 CRIENGLISH.com Web Editor: Zhang Zhang

Ever since the operation of the world's highest and longest plateau railroad a decade ago, the Qinghai-Tibet Railway in southwestern China has brought a sea change to the lives of people living in Tibet.

Known as "the Roof of the World,"the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau used to be "inaccessible to the outside world."

However, that was before the opening of the Railway.

Now, an increasing number of people, especially holiday makers, can explore this holy land.

Statistics released by the Tibetan government show that the autonomous region received more than 20-million visitors in 2015, 11 times more than before the railway started service.

Chen Youti, who works in the Education Bureau of Bange County, says the Qinghai-Tibet Railway has greatly shortened his travel time from inland China to Tibet and lowered the costs of his travels.

"You can't imagine how troublesome it was for me to come in and out of Tibet. It used to take me four days on the way from my hometown in Yunnan. After the opening of the Qinghai-Tibet railway, I only have to make one transfer at Chengdu, which has shortened the travel time from nearly 90 hours to 60. "

The biggest beneficiaries of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway's opening have been local Tibetans.

60-year-old Tashi Tsering, travellng by train from Shigatse to Lhasa to fetch his paycheck, says the convenience the railway brings to his life is incredible.

"The Qinghai-Tibet Railway has brought us much convenience. Tibetans have benefited a lot from it, which was really out of my expectation. The train is safe, fast and cheap. I've traveled more than ten times from Shigatse to Lhasa since the rail line opened."

In addition, living expenses for people Tibet have also been lowered. Nagqu Logistics Centre head Jing Zhanjie attributes all this to the opening of the Qinghai-Tibet railway, which he says has lowered the costs of transporting goods into Tibet.

"The completion and opening of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway makes the transportation of goods into Tibet much more convenient, which lowers the costs of people's living expenses, including rice, oil, flour and other foodstuffs. "

Jing also added that compared with highway transport, rail freight transport can help reduce the price of building materials, including steel, cement and timber, noting that there are many new towns along the railway in Nagqu.

Figures released by the Tibetan government show that its GDP surged from 25 billion yuan, about 3.8 billion US dollars, in 2005 to over 100 billion yuan in 2015, with an annual growth rate of over 10-percent.

For CRI, this is Li Jianhua reporting from Lhasa.
 
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Riding along 'route to heaven': 10th anniversary of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
(People's Daily Online) 15:14, June 30, 2016

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Great changes have taken place in Golmud since the Qinghai-Tibet Railway opened to traffic 10 years ago. (People's Daily Online/Photo)

July 1 marks the 10th anniversary of the construction of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway. Over the past 3,600 days, there have been about 30 trains every day, which have transported more than 100 million passengers, 500 million tons of goods and helped to boost Tibet's GDP which now exceeds 100 billion yuan.

At a total length of 1,956 kilometers, the Qinghai-Tibet Railway connects Xining, the capital city of northwestern China's Qinghai province in the east and Lhasa, the capital city of China's Tibet Autonomous Region in the south.

The first phase of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway between Xining and Golmud began to be constructed in 1958 and the 814-km-long line was put into service in 1984. The second phase linking Golmud to Lhasa is 1,142 kilometers long and opened to traffic on July 1, 2006 after five years of construction.

Qinghai-Tibet Railway is the world's most amazing railway and is called "the route to heaven". The railway boasts the world's highest railway tunnel the Fenghuoshan Tunnel, which stands 4,910 meters above sea level, the world's highest railway station the Tanggula Station, 5,608 meters above sea level, the 11.7-km-long Qingshui River Bridge, at an altitude of 4,500 meters in the Hoh Xil unpopulated area, the 690-meter-long Sancha River Bridge, which is 54 meters above the valley floor.

In May 2016, to mark the 10th anniversary of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway opening to the traffic, reporters rode the train along "the route to heaven" again to bring our readers the latest report on geographical landscape, historical and cultural relics, local customs, economic development, tourist attractions, ecological environment and wildlife the along the railroad.
 
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The Qinghai-Tibet Railway turns 10 on July 1, 2016. The 1,956-kilometer-long railway, which began service in July 2006, is the world's highest and longest plateau railroad and also the first railway connecting the Tibet Autonomous Region with other parts of China. Ecological protection measures taken during and after the construction of the railway have ensured it was built as "a green railway". Noting that environmental pollution has been brought under effective control, it said the alpine vegetation ecosystem has been effectively protected, the permafrost environment has been stable for years, the eco-function regions have been doing well and the plateau landscape remains intact. (Xinhua/Purbu Zhaxi)

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BEIJING, June 30, 2016 (Xinhua) -- File photo taken on July 1, 2006 shows the train coded "Zang (Tibet) 2" running on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway across the Lhasa River after leaving the Railway Station of Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region.
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BEIJING, June 30, 2016 (Xinhua) -- Photo taken on June 21, 2016 shows a train running on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway through the Northern Tibet Grassland, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region.
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BEIJING, June 30, 2016 (Xinhua) -- File hoto taken on Sept. 28, 2014 shows a train running on the Nagqu section of the Qinghai-Tibet railway, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region.
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BEIJING, June 30, 2016 (Xinhua) -- File photo taken on July 9, 2013 shows a freight train running on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway past the Kunlun Mountain in northwest China's Qinghai Province.
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BEIJING, June 30, 2016 (Xinhua) -- File hoto taken on July 20, 2006 shows a train running on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway near Lake Cona in southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region.
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BEIJING, June 30, 2016 (Xinhua) -- Photo taken on June 26, 2016 shows a train running on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway through a wetland of Northern Tibet, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region.
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BEIJING, June 30, 2016 (Xinhua) -- File photo taken on July 1, 2006 shows the passenger train coded "Qing 1" passing the Tanggula Mountain Pass with an altitude of 5,072 meters above sea level, the highest of world's railway, in southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region.

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World's highest railway station the Tanggula Station.(People's Daily Online/Photo)
 
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Good to see development in Xinjiang and hopefully this will also benefit the Central Asia via the Belt and Road Initiative.

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Xinjiang goes on fast track
(Global Times) 07:45, July 05, 2016

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(File Photo)

Region stable, prosperous 7 years after Urumqi riots

The Belt and Road initiative has made Northwest China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region more open and prosperous, as the region strives to stamp out the influence of extremism and terrorism, analysts said.

Tuesday marks the seventh anniversary of the July 5 riots in Urumqi, Xinjiang's capital, that killed 197 people.

"After years of an intense crackdown on the three evil forces - terrorism, extremism and separatism - Xinjiang has become more stable which has greatly contributed to economic development," Xu Jianying, a research fellow at the Research Center for Chinese Borderland History and Geography of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Monday.

Xinjiang has not only seen more economic, business and personnel exchanges with inland provinces but has also opened up to the outside world under the Belt and Road initiative, said Xu.

In March 2015, Xinjiang was named as the "core zone" of the Silk RoadEconomic Belt in the framework jointly published by the National Development and Reform Commission, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Commerce.

The framework states that Xinjiang could serve as a bridgehead in China's westward opening-up, deepen ties with countries in Central Asia and transform itself into a transportation hub, and a center of trade and logistics, culture and technology.

Xinjiang will also host the 5th China-Eurasia Expo from September 20 to 25, where a record number of attendees, including political leaders from Asia and Europe and heads of international organizations, are expected.

"The initiative boosts cross-border infrastructure development, including roads and pipelines in the region, laying the foundation for economic as well as personnel exchanges," said Xu, adding that aside from the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), Xinjiang has developed more channels with bordering countries.

Xinjiang also announced in April the launch of three routes, including the China-Kazakhstan-Kyrgyzstan route, the China-Tajikistan route, and the China-Russia-Kazakhstan-Mongolia route in an effort to drive cultural and non-governmental exchanges between China and Central Asia, Xinhua reported.

According to data the Global Times obtained from Xinjiang's Department of Commerce, trade in the region from January to May was valued at $6.13 billion. Its growth was China's second-highest.

Xinjiang has also seen a growth in tourism and personnel exchanges in recent years.
According to Xinjiang's Statistic Bureau, the region welcomed 60.97 million tourists in 2015, contributing 102.2 billion yuan to the economy.

Pan Zhiping, a research fellow at the Xinjiang Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Monday that the local government has taken steps to maintain social stability in recent years, since it serves as the foundation of the region's openness and prosperity.

"Xinjiang is more stable after officials spent years removing the negative influence of religious extremism in villages and communities, taking measures against activities involving extremism, separatism, and terrorism, and implementing poverty alleviation programs," said Pan, adding that an increase in international exchanges and opening-up have raised new challenges to safeguard stability.

He said the local government has also relaxed its visa policy to make personnel exchanges more convenient.

In 2014, Shanghai police arrested nine Uyghurs from Xinjiang, including a wanted alleged terrorist in November when they attempted to sneak out of China with altered Turkish passports. They were held for being suspected of organizing, leading and participating in terrorist organizations.

"The Xinjiang government should also be aware of the influence of the mounting activities of overseas terrorism organizations, especially the Islamic State, because they are using the Internet, including social media, to gain influence in China," said Pan.
 
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China Focus: China sees environmental progress in Tibet
Source: Xinhua 2016-07-05 21:38:15

LHASA, July 5 (Xinhua) -- By the Yarlung Tsangpo River in Tibet, about 1000 residents are busy planting trees.

"It was very dusty and windy here a decade ago," said 61-year-old Tseten, sweat on his forehead. "Neither people nor animals came out here."

There are fewer bad days now, perhaps thanks to the trees, he said.

"You can see foxes and rabbits here now," he added.

In Tibet, more trees are being planted, wild animals are better protected and polluting industries have been closed down. The environment is top of the agenda at the ongoing Forum on the Development of Tibet 2016.

In Tseten's hometown, Xigaze, once where sandstorms frequently struck, herdsmen have planted about 1,200 hectares of forest in the past two years, with about 550 ha more to be completed this year, according to Tsering Dondrup of the local forestry bureau.

Environmental campaigns near Tibet's six major rivers have seen pastures returned to forests and desertification stopped in its tracks .

In the Shannan section of the Yarlung Tsangpo River, for instance, forests are increasing at an annual speed of 5.25 cubic meters per ha.

According to a 2014 national survey, Tibet ranked first in terms of forest area and forest stock.

Wildlife protection is also much improved. At Changtang National Nature Reserve in northern Tibet, hundreds of thousands of Tibetan antelope wander.

"Tibetan antelopes are usually very shy. They run away at the sight of human beings," said Tsewang Norbu, a ranger at the reserve. "But instead of running away, they now stop and stare at me each time I approach them on my motorcycle."

In Tibet, 125 species have state protection, about one third of the national total. Tibetan antelope, wild ***, wild yak, and even snow leopard are increasingly sighted in Tibet.

In the past 20 years, the number of Tibetan antelopes has risen from about 40,000 to almost 200,000, while the wild *** population has risen almost three-fold in the same period.

More wildlife brings trouble for some residents. In February, a Xigaze resident claimed to have been "robbed" by 10 northern plains gray langur.

"They know that we will not hurt them, so they often come to steal food in our village, particularly during Winters and Spring," said Gyezang."This year they stole my potatoes and carrots, though government subsidies helped cover my losses."

Authorities planning to spend 15.5 billion yuan (2.3 billion U.S. dollars) to guarantee "blue skies and clean water."

"Environmental protection is our bottom line when it comes to economic development," said Losang Gyaltsen, the regional Party chairman.

Tibet has also banned expansions of industries like steel, chemicals and paper, with existing companies shut down or told to transform, according to Zhuang Hongxiang, deputy head of the regional environmental protection department.
 
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I want these here in Taipei :hitwall:

**

Farmers harvest Hami melons in Xinjiang
2016-07-05 18:01:26 Xinhua Web Editor: Huang Yue



Traders select Hami melons, a popular cantaloupe, in Hami, northwest China's Xinjiang Region, July 4, 2016. Farmers reaped a bumper harvest of more than 100 varieties of Hami melons in Nanhu Township of Xinjiang recently. [Photo: Xinhua/Polat]


Farmers load Hami melons, a popular cantaloupe, in Hami, northwest China's Xinjiang Region, July 4, 2016. Farmers reaped a bumper harvest of more than 100 varieties of Hami melons in Nanhu Township of Xinjiang recently. [Photo: Xinhua/Polat]


Farmers pick Hami melons, a popular cantaloupe, in Hami, northwest China's Xinjiang Region, July 4, 2016. Farmers reaped a bumper harvest of more than 100 varieties of Hami melons in Nanhu Township of Xinjiang recently. [Photo: Xinhua/Polat]
 
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I want these here in Taipei :hitwall:

**

Farmers harvest Hami melons in Xinjiang
2016-07-05 18:01:26 Xinhua Web Editor: Huang Yue



Traders select Hami melons, a popular cantaloupe, in Hami, northwest China's Xinjiang Region, July 4, 2016. Farmers reaped a bumper harvest of more than 100 varieties of Hami melons in Nanhu Township of Xinjiang recently. [Photo: Xinhua/Polat]


Farmers load Hami melons, a popular cantaloupe, in Hami, northwest China's Xinjiang Region, July 4, 2016. Farmers reaped a bumper harvest of more than 100 varieties of Hami melons in Nanhu Township of Xinjiang recently. [Photo: Xinhua/Polat]


Farmers pick Hami melons, a popular cantaloupe, in Hami, northwest China's Xinjiang Region, July 4, 2016. Farmers reaped a bumper harvest of more than 100 varieties of Hami melons in Nanhu Township of Xinjiang recently. [Photo: Xinhua/Polat]
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@AndrewJin @TaiShang

Isn't that the high speed rail in the left background of these pictures?
 
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