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II. TIBET'S MODERNIZATION ACHIEVEMENTS In the
past 50 years, thanks to the leadership of the Central
Government, the aid of the whole nation and the unremitting
efforts of the people of all ethnic groups in the region,
Tibet has kept marching forward along the road to
modernization and made significant achievements that have
attracted worldwide attention. -- THE ECONOMY HAS
PROGRESSED SIGNIFICANTLY. During the past 50 years, Tibet
has witnessed tremendous changes in its economic system and
economic structure and significant progress in its aggregate
economic volume. Having thoroughly eliminated the former
closed, natural economy based on the manorial system, Tibet
is fast on its way toward a modern market economy. In 2000,
the region's GDP reached 11.746 billion yuan, twice as much
as in 1995, four times as much as in 1990, and over 30 times
as much as in the pre-peaceful liberation period. The
economic structure is becoming more and more rational. The
primary industry accounted for 30.9 percent in the GDP, as
against 99 percent 50 years ago, and the proportions of the
secondary and tertiary industries rose to 23.2 percent and
45.9 percent, respectively. Modern industry, having
grown from nothing, has gradually become an important pillar
of the rapid economic development in Tibet. So far, over 20
branches of the industry have been set up, including energy,
light industry, textiles, machine building, lumbering,
mining, building materials, chemicals, pharmaceuticals,
printing and foodstuff processing. This modern industrial
system with Tibetan characteristics has produced some
nationally famous brand names, such as Lhasa Beer, Qizheng
Tibetan Medicine and Zhufeng Motorcycles. By 2000, Tibet had
482 enterprises at and above the township level and the
added value of its secondary industry reached 2.721 billion
yuan. Basic industries, such as energy and
transportation, have thrived. Power industry has developed
rapidly, and a new energy system has been formed, with
hydropower as the mainstay backed up by supplementary energy
sources such as geothermal power, wind energy and solar
energy. By 2000, there were 401 power plants in Tibet, with
a total installed capacity of 356,200 kw and an annual
energy output of 661 million kwh + a world of difference
from before the peaceful liberation, when there was only one
125-kw power plant, which worked irregularly and supplied
electricity only to a handful of aristocrats. Putting an end
to the history of Tibet having not a single highway, a
three-dimensional transportation system is now in place,
with highway transportation as the major part, and air and
pipeline transportation developing in coordination. A
highway network now extends in all directions with Lhasa as
the center, including such trunk roads as the Qinghai-Tibet,
Sichuan-Tibet, Xinjiang-Tibet, Yunnan-Tibet and China-Nepal
highways and 15 main highways and 375 branch highways. These
roads total 22,500 km, and reach every county and over 80
percent of the townships in the region. The two civil
airports in Tibet, Gonggar Airport in Lhasa and Bamda
Airport in Qamdo, operate domestic and international routes
from Lhasa to Beijing, Chengdu, Chongqing, Xi'an, Xining,
Shanghai, Deqen and Kunming in Yunnan Province, Hong Kong,
and Kathmandu of Nepal. Meanwhile, a 1, 080-km petroleum
pipeline has been built from Golmud in Qinghai Province to
Lhasa, the highest-altitude pipeline in the world. It
carries over 80 percent of petroleum transported in the
region. In June 2001, work started on the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway, and the days when the region was inaccessible by
rail will be gone for good in the foreseeable future. The tertiary industry has become the largest
industrial sector in Tibet. Such newly emerging industries
as modern commerce, tourism, postal services, catering,
entertainment and information technology, unknown in old
Tibet, have grown by leaps and bounds. Telecommunications
have developed particularly speedily, and an advanced modern
telecommunications network covering the whole of Tibet has
taken shape, with Lhasa as the center, and including cable
and satellite transmission together with program-controlled
switching systems, digital and mobile communications. In
2000, Tibet Telecom business totaled 384 million yuan-worth
and its income was 123 million yuan, 179 times and 1,086
times the 1978 figures, respectively, and on average
increasing by 26.6 percent and 24.3 percent respectively
each year over the past 22 years. By the end of 2000, the
total installed capacity of fixed telephones reached
170,200, and 111,100 telephones were installed. The total
installed capacity of mobile telephones has reached 123,000,
with 72,300 mobile telephone users. There are also nine
Internet websites and 4,513 users. By 2000, the added value
of the tertiary industry had reached 5.393 billion yuan, the
highest among all the constituents of the region's GDP. The mode of production in agriculture and animal
husbandry has changed radically, and the productive forces
and production returns have risen by big margins. Since the
peaceful liberation, the state has invested heavily in water
conservancy works, and put great efforts into a number of
capital construction projects for agriculture and animal
husbandry, especially in the comprehensive development of
the middle reaches of the Yarlungzangbo, Lhasa and Nyangqu
rivers. These endeavors have greatly improved the
agricultural and animal husbandry production conditions in
Tibet, and are changing the Tibetan peasants and herdsmen's
traditional lifestyles of living at the mercy of the
elements. A series of agricultural and stockbreeding
technologies have been spread widely, including scientific
fertilization, improvement of breeds, pest control and
stockraising. The mechanization of agriculture and
production efficiency have both improved by a large margin,
and farming and animal husbandry are advancing along the
line of modernization. By 2000, the added value of the
primary industry in Tibet had reached 3.632 billion yuan,
the total grain yield had reached 962,200 tons, the total
amount of livestock had come to 22. 66 million head,
self-sufficiency in grains and edible oils had been
basically realized, and the distribution of meat and milk
per capita had risen above the national average. --
THE LEVEL OF URBANIZATION HAS CONSTANTLY IMPROVED. With its natural economy old Tibet lacked the
dynamics of urban development and had only a few small
cities and towns. Lhasa, the most populous urban center, had
a population of just over 30,000. Other places with
comparatively large populations were big villages rather
than cities, each having only a few thousand residents. Even
Lhasa lacked a sound urban operating mechanism of any sort
and had scarcely any of the amenities of a proper city. At
present, the urban scale of Tibet is expanding constantly
together with industrial growth. By 2000, there were two
organic cities in Tibet, 72 counties and districts and 112
organic towns. Moreover, the urban population totaled
491,100, and the total urban area was 147 sq m. The
comprehensive functions of the cities and towns have
improved steadily, and complete systems have taken shape in
various fields, such as roads, water supply, public security
and community services, basically satisfying the needs of
the lives of the urban residents and the economic
development of the cities. Tibet is now marching toward
modernization in urban appearance and environmental
protection. Its urban environmental index now ranks first in
the country with the per capita area of its urban public
lawns reaching 10.27 sq m and a greenbelt coverage of 24.4
percent. Urban development groups radiating from Lhasa have
come into existence in Tibet, while efforts are being made
to form an economic pattern centered on cities and towns to
promote economic development in neighboring areas and
stimulate mutual development through the integration of
urban and rural areas. -- REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENTS
HAVE BEEN MADE IN OPENING UP. The policy of reform
and opening-up has promoted the unprecedented development of
Tibet's commerce, foreign trade and tourism, and
strengthened its interrelations and cooperation with the
inland areas and the rest of the world. The regional market
system has taken initial shape, and is gradually being
integrated into the market system of the whole country and
even that of the world. A great number of farmers and
herdsmen have become businessmen, throwing themselves into
the mainstream of the market economy. Commodities from other
parts of the country and the world are flowing into Tibet in
a continuous stream to enrich both the urban and rural
markets and the lives of the local people. A great quantity
of Tibetan famous-brand products, and special local products
and handicrafts have entered the domestic and international
markets. The flourishing of commerce and trade has given a
powerful impetus to the development of the farm and
stockbreeding products processing industry and, as a result,
agriculture and animal husbandry are going market-oriented.
The state has formulated a series of preferential policies
to encourage domestic and foreign enterprises to invest in
enterprises in Tibet, and expand both domestic and
international economic exchanges and cooperation. Tibet has
attained the contractual value of US$ 125 million in
overseas investment over the past five years. By 2000, its
total imports and exports had reached US$ 130 million-worth,
of which the total export value came to US$ 113 million. The "roof of the world" has become one of
China's most popular tourist destinations, attracting
numerous tourists from both home and abroad with its unique
natural views and places of cultural interest. In 2000,
Tibet received a total of 598,300 tourists from both home
and abroad, of whom 148,900 were overseas tourists, earning
a direct income of 780 million yuan, and an indirect income
of 2.98 billion yuan, accounting for 6.6 percent and 25.38
percent of the region's GDP, respectively. --
ENVIRONMENTAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT HAS PROGRESSED IN
COORDINATION. Large-scale development and
construction will be certain to bring enormous pressure to
bear on the fragile ecological environment of Tibet. Since
the initiation of the policy of reform and opening-up, the
Central Government and the local government of Tibet have
consistently adhered to the strategy of sustainable
development, simultaneously planning and implementing
environmental protection and economic construction as an
integral whole, to guarantee that the demonstration, design,
construction and operation of engineering projects would
give full consideration to eco-environmental protection to
promote coordinated environmental and economic development.
The " Regulations on Environmental Protection" and
the "Regulations on the Administration of Geological
and Mineral Resources" have been formulated and
implemented in Tibet, to form a complete system together
with such state laws as the "Agrarian Management
Law," " Water Law," "Law on Water and
Soil Conservation," "Grassland Law" and
"Law on the Protection of Wildlife." Now, with the
introduction of an effective supervision and management
system for environmental protection and pollution control,
most of the forests, rivers, lakes, pastures, wetlands,
glaciers, snow mountains and wild animals and plants in the
region are well protected, and the water, air and
environmental quality is excellent. Eighteen nature reserves
at the national and provincial levels have been established,
including those in Changtang, Mount Qomolangma and the
Yarlungzangbo Grand Canyon, whose combined area accounts for
half of the total area of China's nature reserves, playing
an important role in the protection and improvement of the
fragile plateau eco-environment. Over the past few years,
Tibet has invested over 50 million yuan in the control of
waste water and gas at enterprises and institutions such as
the Lhasa Brewery, Yangbajain Power Plant, Lhasa Leather
Plant, People's Hospital of the Autonomous Region and Lhasa
Cement Plant, effectively improving the urban environment
and the quality of the region's water. Since 1991, Tibet has
invested a total of 900 million yuan in carrying out the
development projects in the areas of the Yarlungzangbo,
Lhasa and Nyangqu rivers, playing an active role in the
prevention and control of soil erosion and the halting of
desertification through the construction of water
conservancy works, the improvement of pastures, the
amelioration of medium- and low-yield fields, and
large-scale afforestation, achieving remarkable
comprehensive benefits for coordinated social, economic and
environmental development. According to the environmental
evaluation indices, Tibet's ecology, which basically remains
in its primordial condition, is the best in China in terms
of environmental conditions. With the implementation of the
state's strategy of large-scale development of the western
region and the carrying out of the essential points of the
Fourth Forum of the Central Government on Work in Tibet, the
region is strengthening its eco-environmental protection and
planning to invest 22.7 billion yuan and launch 160 key
projects for ecological protection by the mid-21st century
to further protect and improve its ecological environment. -- RAPID PROGRESS HAS BEEN MADE IN EDUCATION, SCIENCE
AND TECHNOLOGY, AND MEDICAL AND HEALTH CARE. In old
Tibet there was not a single school in the modern sense, and
education was monopolized by monasteries. The enrollment
ratio of school-age children was less than two percent, and
the illiteracy rate of the young and middle-aged people
reached 95 percent. But now, education has been widely
popularized, and the broad masses of the people enjoy the
right to receive education. The state has invested
enormously in developing education, and a complete education
system is now in place, covering regular education,
preschool education, adult education, vocational education
and special education. By 2000, Tibet had set up 956 schools
of all kinds, with a total enrollment of 381,100 students;
the enrollment ratio of school-age children had increased to
85.8 percent; the illiteracy rate had declined to 32.5
percent; and 33, 000 persons had received education above
the junior college level, accounting for 12.6 per thousand
of the region's total population and higher than the average
national level. Now Tibet not only boasts its own master's
and doctorate degree holders, but also a number of
nationally renowned experts and scholars. Growing out
of nothing, modern science and technology have been
developing rapidly. There was no modern scientific research
institute in Tibet before its peaceful liberation, and even
such applied technology as astronomy and calendrical
calculation were monopolized by the monasteries behind a
mysterious religious facade. Attaching great importance to
scientific research and the popularization and application
of science and technology, the Central Government and the
local government of Tibet have set up 25 scientific research
institutes over the past half century, employing 35,000
professional scientific and technical personnel in
disciplines such as history, economics, population,
linguistics and religion, and dozens of sectors such as
agriculture, animal husbandry, forestry, ecology, biology,
Tibetan medicine and pharmacology, salt lakes, geo-thermal
and solar energy, among which studies in Tibetology, plateau
ecology, Tibetan medicine and pharmacology take the lead in
the country. Besides, a number of academic achievements made
in Tibet are of worldwide influence. Medical and
health care has grown vigorously. In the old days, when
traditional Tibetan medicine was monopolized by feudal
nobles and monasteries, the region was extremely short of
doctors and medicine, and most sick people lacked both money
for medical care and access to doctors. Now a medical and
health network has been established in Tibet, integrated
with traditional Chinese, Western and Tibetan medicines,
covering all the cities and villages in the region, with
Lhasa as the center. Tibetan medicine and pharmacology, with
unique ethnic features, are promoted all over China and
abroad. By 2000, the medical and health organizations in the
region had increased to 1,237, with 6,348 beds and 8,948
professionals. The numbers of hospital beds and health
workers available per thousand people in Tibet exceeded the
national average level. At present, the cooperative medical
service program covers 80 percent of the Tibetan rural
areas, and 97 percent of children have been immunized
against epidemic diseases. There is no longer any lack of
medicine, and the level of the Tibetan people's health has
improved substantially. The incidence of various infectious
and endemic diseases prevalent in old Tibet, such as
smallpox, cholera, venereal diseases, macula, typhoid fever,
scarlet fever and tetanus, has declined to eight per
thousand, and some of the diseases have been wiped out. The
childbirth mortality rate has dropped from 50 per thousand
in 1959 to approximately seven per thousand; and the infant
mortality rate, from 430 to 6.61 per thousand. The average
life expectancy of the people has increased from 35.5 years
in the 1950s to the present 67 years. The population of old
Tibet had increased rather slowly; over the 200-odd years
before the 1950s, it had fluctuated at around one million.
(According to the census of the Qing Dynasty government from
1734 to 1736, Tibet had a population of 941,200, and the
population reported by the Tibetan local government headed
by the Dalai Lama in 1953 was one million, an increase of
only 58,000 in 200 years.) However, over the 40-odd years
since the Democratic Reform, Tibet's population had
increased to 2.5983 million by 2000, or an increase of more
than 160 percent. Considerable achievements have been
made in sports. A number of sports facilities up to the
international standards have been built in Tibet, and
traditional Tibetan sports have been revived, standardized
and popularized, some of them even having been included in
national competitions. Some excellent athletes from Tibet
have scored outstanding achievements in various national
sports games and competitions, and in mountain climbing in
particular Tibetans have always taken the lead in the
country. In 1999, the Sixth National Ethnic Games were held
jointly by Tibet and Beijing, further improving the level of
Tibetan sports. -- THE FINE ASPECTS OF TRADITIONAL
TIBETAN CULTURE HAVE BEEN EXPLORED, PROTECTED AND DEVELOPED. The state has invested a huge amount of capital, gold
and silver in the maintenance and protection of the key
historical monuments in Tibet. The Potala Palace and Jokhang
Temple have been included in UNESCO's World Cultural
Heritage List. The collation of the Tibetan-language
Tripitaka (Gangyur and Tengyur) has been completed. Known as
an "encyclopedia" of ancient Tibet, the Bonist
Tripitaka has been sorted out in a systematic way and
published in its entirety. The Life of King Gesar, which had
been handed down orally for centuries, has reached the grand
total of more than 200 volumes. Thanks to the great support
of the state and unremitting efforts in the past few
decades, more than 300 handwritten and block-printed copies
of this "Homeric epic of the East" have been
collected, of which more than 70 volumes have been published
in the Tibetan language, over 20 volumes in the Chinese
language, and several volumes in English, Japanese and
French. Folk songs, dances, dramas, tales and other forms of
artistic expression have been refined and imbued with new
ideas and higher forms of expression for enjoyment by the
general public. The state has invested in the construction
of a large number of cultural and recreational facilities
with complete functions and advanced facilities in Tibet,
such as museums, libraries, exhibition halls and cinemas, in
sharp contrast to the old days when Tibet almost had no
cultural and recreational facilities to speak of. By 2000,
the Tibet Autonomous Region had more than 400 public
cultural centers, more than 25 professional theatrical
troupes of various kinds, such as the Song and Dance
Ensemble, Tibetan Opera Troupe and Modern Drama Troupe of
the Tibet Autonomous Region, more than 160 amateur
performance troupes, and 17 itinerant performance troupes at
the county level. They can meet the demands of the broad
masses of the people for cultural entertainment. --
TIBETAN'S CHARACTERISTICS AND TRADITIONS HAVE BEEN RESPECTED
AND CARRIED ON IN A SCIENTIFIC WAY. The Tibet
Autonomous Region has the right to decide its local affairs
and work out relevant laws and regulations in accordance
with the law and local political, economic and cultural
characteristics, as well as the right to flexibly implement
or cease to implement relevant decisions of the state organs
at the higher levels, upon approval by the higher
authorities. Since 1965, the Regional People's Congress and
its Standing Committee have formulated and promulgated more
than 160 local laws and regulations, involving the building
of political power, economic development, culture and
education, spoken and written language, protection of
cultural relics, protection of wildlife and natural
resources and other aspects, thus effectively safeguarding
the special rights and interests of the Tibetan people. For
instance, the power and administrative organs of the Tibet
Autonomous Region have designated the Tibetan New Year,
Shoton (Yogurt) Festival and other traditional Tibetan
festivals as the region's official holidays, apart from the
official national holidays. Out of consideration for the
special natural and geographical factors of Tibet, the
region has fixed the work week at 35 hours, five hours fewer
than the national work hours per week. The Tibetan
people's freedom of religious belief and their traditional
customs and habits have been respected and protected.
According to statistics, since the 1980s the state has
allocated more than 300 million yuan and a large amount of
gold, silver and other materials for the maintenance and
protection of the monasteries in Tibet. For instance, the
state allocated more than 55 million yuan for the repair of
the Potala Palace, and the renovation lasted more than five
years, being the largest project and involving the largest
amount of capital in the maintenance history of the palace
in the past few centuries. At present, Tibet has 1,787
monasteries and sites for religious activities, and over
46,000 resident monks and nuns; the region's various
important religious festivals and activities are held
normally; and every year more than one million Tibetan
people go to Lhasa to pay homage. While maintaining the
traditional Tibetan ways and styles of costume, diet and
housing, the Tibetan people have absorbed many new modern
civilized customs in the aspects of clothing, food, housing
and transportation, as well as marriage and funerals, thus
greatly enriching their lives. The Tibetan people's
freedom to study, use and develop their own spoken and
written language is fully protected. The government has
established the special Tibetan Language Work Guidance
Committee and editing and translation organs so as to
promote the study, use and development of the Tibetan
language. The Tibetan language is a major course of study
for schools at all levels in Tibet. Tibetan textbooks and
reference materials have been compiled, translated and
published for all courses at all levels of schools from
primary to senior high. Tibet University has compiled 19
varieties of teaching materials in the Tibetan language,
which have already been used on a trial basis. The laws and
regulations, resolutions, announcements and other official
documents issued by the Regional People's Congress and the
Regional People's Government, and the name plates and signs
of public institutions and sites are written in both the
Tibetan and Chinese languages. The courts and procuratorates
at all levels handle cases and issue legal documents in the
Tibetan language with regard to the Tibetan litigants and
other participants. Newspapers, and radio and TV stations
use both the Tibetan and Chinese languages. The Tibet
People's Radio Station broadcasts Tibetan-language items
20.5 hours a day, making up 50 percent of the station's
total broadcasting hours and amount. The Tibet TV Station
releases 12 hours of programs in the Tibetan language every
day, and the channels in the Tibetan language were formally
relayed via satellite in 1999. Now Tibet has 23
Tibetan-language newspapers and magazines, and the Tibet
Daily has installed computer editing and typesetting in the
Tibetan language. Great progress has been made in the
standardization of information technology in the Tibetan
language. The Tibetan code has been brought up to the
national and international standards, becoming the first
minority written language in China to reach the
international standards. -- THE PEOPLE'S QUALITY OF
LIFE HAS GREATLY IMPROVED. Social and economic
development has improved the people's material and cultural
life remarkably. In 2000, people of all ethnic groups in
Tibet had basically shaken off poverty, and had enough to
eat and wear; and some people were living a fairly
comfortable life. Along with the improvement of the people's
livelihood, diversified consumption patterns have appeared,
and such consumer goods as refrigerators, color TV sets,
washing machines, motorcycles and wristwatches have entered
ordinary families. Many farmers and herdsmen have become
well-off and have built new houses; some have even bought
automobiles. Currently, Tibet ranks first in per capita
housing in the country. Radio, television,
telecommunications, the Internet and other modern
information transmission means, which are at the same levels
of the country and the rest of the world, are now parts of
the Tibetans' daily life. By 2000, the coverage of radio
stations had reached 77.7 percent of the population in
Tibet, and that of TV stations, 76.1 percent. News about the
rest of the country and other parts of the world reach most
people in Tibet by means of radio and TV, and they can
obtain information from and make contact with other parts of
the country and the rest of the world through telephone,
telegram, fax or the Internet at any time. The
people's political status has been constantly raised, and
their participation in political affairs is becoming more
extensive with each passing day. Like the people of other
ethnic groups in China, the Tibetan people have the right to
vote and stand for election, and extensively participate in
the administration of state and local affairs according to
law. Of the deputies to the National People's Congress, 19
are from Tibet, of whom over 80 percent are of the Tibetan
ethnic group or other ethnic minorities. Of the deputies to
the people's congresses at the regional, county and township
levels, those from the Tibetan ethnic group and other ethnic
minorities make up 82.4 percent, 92. 62 percent and 99
percent, respectively. The main leading posts of the
people's congresses, governments, political consultative
conferences, and courts and procuratorates at all levels in
the region are filled by Tibetan citizens, and Tibetan
cadres also hold leading posts in all the state organs at
the central level. Of the chairman and vice-chairmen of the
Standing Committee of the People's Congress of the Tibet
Autonomous Region, Tibetans and people of other ethnic
minorities make up 71.4 percent; of the members of the
Standing Committee of the Regional People's Congress, 80
percent; and of the chairman and vice-chairmen of the
Regional People's Government, 77.8 percent; of the total
cadres in Tibet, 79.4 percent; and of all the technical
personnel in Tibet, 69.36 percent. Tibet is still an
underdeveloped area in China, because it is located on the
"roof of the world," which is frigid, lacks oxygen
and has bad natural conditions. Another reason is that Tibet
had very little to start with and its social and historical
conditions were burdened with the legacy of centuries of
backward feudal serfdom. Tibet's economy is small; its
development level is low; agriculture, animal husbandry and
the ecological environment are fragile; the infrastructure
facilities are weak; and science and technology and
education are backward. In addition, Tibet lacks the ability
for self-accumulation and development, and its modernization
level lags far behind that of the southeastern coastal areas
of China. But it is beyond doubt that the development of
Tibet in the past half century has greatly changed its
former poor and backward features, and laid a solid
foundation for realizing a leapfrog development in its
modernization drive.
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