Thursday, June 21, 2007

china's cavalier attitude towards occupied tibet, in yet another form

jun 20th, 2007

today is also the day we remember refugees.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: noida09

Hi Rajeev,
 
I really appreciate the time & effort u are put into your blog. Its wonderful i read it everyday.
 
You may have read the following but i jut tht i'll send it to u: from the toi. They really are a bunch of bloody locusts
 
China to go ahead with highway to Mt Everest
20 Jun, 2007 l 1407 hrs ISTl PTI
  Print

BEIJING: Despite concerns from environmentalists, China on Wednesday said it will press ahead with the construction of a 110-km-long highway in Tibet to Mt Everest and will not also rule out building hotels in future in the fragile Himalayan region.

Construction of a highway on Mt Everest will be completed before August 2008, in time for the Beijing Olympics Games, Chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Regional government Qiangba Puncog told reporters at a press conference.

"We'll ensure completion of the road by all means by next August," he said.

The project aims to turn a 110-km rough road linking Tingri County of Xigaze Prefecture at the foot of the mountain to the Base Camp into a blacktop highway fenced by undulating guardrails.

On completion, the highway will become the major route for tourists and mountaineers who are crowding onto Mt Qomolangma (Chinese name for Mt Everest) in ever larger numbers.

"More tourists are flocking into the Qomolangma Base Camp in the recent two years," said Puncog. "Tourists from Europe and America in particular like to have a glimpse of the Mount Qomolangma."

Some of the tourists, he said, had complained the road there was in poor condition and unsafe.

Organisers of the Beijing Olympics Games have revealed ambitious plans for the longest torch relay in Olympic history -- a 137,000-km, 130-day route that would cross five continents and scale the world's summit, which straddles the border between China and Nepal.
 
 
Regds

1 comment:

Shahryar said...

I have often wondered why the Indians persist in calling the mountain Everest instead of Chomolungma, as the Tibetans do.

Apparently it means “goddess mother of the world.”