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Tibet: 50th Anniversary of Peaceful Liberation, 50 Years of Progress (05/31/01)
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The signing of the “17-Article
Agreement” on the peaceful liberation of Tibet in
Beijing 50 years ago turned a new page in the history of
Tibet, according to a Xinhua report from LHASA, capital of
China’s Tibet Autonomous Region.
Legqog,
Chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Regional Government, said
that thanks to the earth-shaking progress made in the past
50 years, Tibetans have walked out of the old, dark,
backward and closed life and entered into a new, bright,
modern, prosperous and open life.
The old
Tibet, with its feudal serfdom, was a very dark decayed
society. The three major estate-holders (Kasha,
nobles and upper-ranking Lamas), who accounted for less than
5% of the population in Tibet, owned serfs and slaves who
made up more than 95% of the population.
Moreover, as productivity in old Tibet was
very low and economy very stagnant, the broad masses of
serfs did not have enough to eat and wear. The old Tibet far
outstripped medieval Europe of cruelty and gloom.
The peaceful liberation of Tibet in
1951 is considered a turning point in the history of Tibet.
It reflected the common aspirations of Tibetan people and
other ethnic peoples in China smashed the imperialist
conspiracy to split China and laid a solid foundation for
the unity of the Chinese nation. The democratic reform
that came 8 years later overthrew the dictatorship by the
upper-class lamas and nobles who ruled Tibet with theocracy
and feudal serfdom. The broad masses of former serfs became
masters of their own destinies.
The Tibet
Autonomous Region was established in 1965 when the first
regional people’s congress was
convened.
So far, the Tibet Autonomous Region
has made more than 150 local laws and regulations, which
involve all aspects of life in Tibet.
In the
National People’s Congress, the highest legislature of
China, 19 deputies are from Tibet. Tibetans and other ethnic
peoples account for 90% of deputies in people’s
congresses at all levels in Tibet. They also make up 74.9%
of cadres in the region.
The Central Government
of China has invested or allocated more than 50 billion yuan
to Tibet in the past 50 years. By 2000,
Tibet’s gross domestic product had reached 11.74
billion yuan, a 30-fold increase over that of 1951.
About 95% of farmers and herdsmen in Tibet
have adequate food and clothing and are headed towards
greater prosperity.
In old Tibet, there were
no modern industries, but today; Tibet’s industrial
output value has risen to 1.83 billion yuan, up 11 times
from that of 1959.
There was only one small
hydropower station that generated electricity for the
privileged few in Tibet before the peaceful liberation. Now
Tibet is blessed with 401 power stations, which are capable
of generating 660 million kwh annually.
Fifty
years ago, there were no highways in Tibet. The car given to
the 14th Dalai Lama by Britain could only run on the two-km
earth road from the Potala Palace to Norbu Lingka, known as
Dalai Lama’s summer palace. Now, Tibet has built a
highway network centered on Lhasa. The total length of it is
about 25,300 km. Highways will extend to all counties in
Tibet in 5 years, while the construction of the Golmud-Lhasa
railway, the highest one in the world, will start in July
this year.
Mobile phones, Internet, wireless
pagers and postal services are common means of communication
among ordinary Tibetans at present day. Tibet has begun a
new era wherein satellites and fibre-optic cables form an
efficient network of communication.
Tibet has
witnessed great progress as well in education, culture and
other social undertakings in the past 50 years. Among the
school-age children in Tibet, 85% of them attend school,
while the illiteracy rate among young people has dropped
from 97% in old Tibet to 39% today. Press and publication
developed quickly. Traditional culture is well protected.
Medical care and public health network has been established.
The average life span of Tibetans has risen from
36 years in 1950 to today’s 67.
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