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China's highest-altitude autonomous prefecture ramps up telemedicine construction
Source: Xinhua| 2020-07-01 15:33:14|Editor: huaxia

XINING, July 1 (Xinhua) -- A total of eight hospitals and eight township-level health centers in northwest China's Golog Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture will have access to telemedicine services of the country's first-tier hospitals by August, local health commission said Wednesday.

Golog, located in Qinghai Province, is China's highest-altitude autonomous prefecture, with the highest point at an altitude of 6,282 meters and the highest-elevated county at nearly 4,400 meters. The harsh environment and backward economy have dragged down the health condition of locals.

The telemedicine treatment in Golog will focus on the construction of remote medical imaging and remote ultrasonic examination centers.

According to Han Shangli, director of Golog's health commission, when local doctors have difficulties diagnosing, patients can receive diagnostic recommendations, based on the imaging data, from hospitals in the provincial capital Xining, Beijing or Shanghai -- all with advanced medical resources and experienced medical staff.

Golog has a population of 211,600, with 91.8 percent being Tibetan residents. Many of these inhabitants live sparsely on a large pastoral area, with limited medical resources, according to Han.

"Telemedicine will help solve medical and health-related problems for the locals," Han said, adding that a long-term training will be introduced for grass-roots doctors, such as village doctors and family doctors.
 
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China builds world’s highest steel pylon in Tibet
Source:Global Times Published: 2020/7/2 11:18:41

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A pylon on Kong Tang Lamu Mountain Photo: VCG

On the 5,342-meter-high Kong Tang Lamu Mountain in Gyirong County, Southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, Chinese State Grid Corp finished construction of a 9AN40 steel pylon as part of a mega power project in the region on Tuesday, making it the highest pylon in the world.

The completion of the pylon marks a big step toward completing a national mega power project that aims to build a 1,689-kilometer-long electric transmission line on the world's highest plateau to connect Ngari Prefecture - the westernmost area of Tibet - with the national grid.

The 9AN40 pylon was a particularly challenging aspect of the project, given its altitude, according to media reports.

Twenty elite construction workers would start to climb the mountain every morning with oxygen bottles, because they took nearly one hour to reach the construction site from the road, even though it is only two kilometers away, The Paper reported.

"The construction was very difficult, we had to replenish ourselves with oxygen every two hours, or we would get high altitude sickness," The Paper quoted a worker on the project as saying.

According to the report, all of the pylons are expected to be finished by the end of July. The test will start from August, and the whole mega power project, with total investment of 7.4 billion yuan, is expected to be finished by the end of this year.

The project is part of China's efforts to build a moderately prosperous society in all respects. Once it is finished, the power grid in Ngari Prefecture will be connected to the national grid, which is expected improve the usage of electricity for 380,000 people in the region.

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Beating poverty in Tibet, China: Pu Tsering's New Ranch
Jul 3, 2020
New China TV

Yak and pasture offer a lifeline to herdsmen living above an altitude of 4,700 meters in Naqu City, in China's Tibet. Watch how a poverty-alleviation program has changed the lives of local herdsmen. #YAKVIDEO
 
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Urumqi's main urban area covered with 5G network
Xinhua | Updated: 2020-07-06 11:11
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A pedestrian walks past a 5G promotion board. [Photo by Su Yang/For China Daily]

URUMQI -- Urumqi, capital of Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, has seen 5G signals covering the main urban area of the city with more 5G base stations built this year.

By the end of June, Urumqi had built a total of 2,379 5G base stations, of which 1,861 were completed this year. Major public venues such as key commercial districts are all covered with the 5G network.

"The construction of 5G base stations has been affected this year due to the COVID-19 epidemic, but the progress has been speeding up and our branch has put into use 902 5G base stations in 38 days," said Bai Tao with the Urumqi branch of China Mobile Xinjiang Company.

In 2019, China Telecom, China Mobile and China Unicom invested a combined amount of 126 million yuan (about $17.8 million) and built 518 5G base stations.

Urumqi, as one of the first 50 Chinese cities that initiated the commercial use of 5G, officially opened 5G commercial services in October last year. Official data show that the number of 5G users in Urumqi has reached 234,300.
 
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5,000 semiconductor lines begin production in Xinjiang
2020/7/14 11:18:34

The 5,000 semiconductor chip test production lines with a total investment of 10 billion yuan ($1.42 billion) have begun production in Horgos, China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. Experts believe they will create more opportunities to boost the regional advancement of the semiconductor sector.

The Horgos Sanyou Fuxin Optoelectronic Semiconductor Industrial Park project was officially launched in the Horgos Industrial Park on July 8. After entering production, the lines will realize an annual output of 24 billion semiconductors and electronic components, according to an official report from the Xinjiang government on July 9.

It is expected that the sales revenues of the newly established industrial park will exceed 10 billion yuan in three years, with profits and taxes of 1 billion yuan, and will create 3,000 jobs to build Horgos into Xinjiang's own "Silicon Valley," the report said.

"China has advanced capabilities and experiences in the development and production of semiconductors, including chip testing, and it is not difficult for the country to build more production lines of this magnitude," industry analyst Xiang Ligang told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Analysts say the new production lines are a good trial for the diversification and transformation of the regional industry toward technological innovation.

Furthermore, Song Guoqiang, chief financial officer of Horgos Sanyou Fuxin Semiconductor Co, said the project will be a driver for 16 upstream and downstream enterprises to settle down in the region, and that number may increase to 100 when the project is fully put into operation, according to articles on the website of the People's Daily on July 9.

Founded in May 2020, the company's business scope includes semiconductor electronic components, field effect tubes, integrated circuits, photoelectric product design, research and development, and the production and sales of electronic products, data from Chinese corporate database Tianyancha showed.

"We plan to enter five Central Asian countries, Russia and the European market to gain a share in the global semiconductor industry," Song said.
 
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Track laying on a new railway has been completed in Xinjiang, China. The rail line forms part of a circular rail network in the northern part of the region.
 
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The laying of railway tracks has been completed for a new line linking China's Xinjiang with Qinghai Province and beyond, paving the way for accelerating development in the western region
 
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More Tibetan parents send children to school after central govt's nationwide targeted poverty alleviation campaign
By Xie Wenting in Qamdo Source: Global Times Published: 2020/8/3 0:59:30

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Students attend class at Yiri Ecological Forest School in Qamdo, Southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region. Photo: Xie Wenting /GT

It was Saturday afternoon. Sixth grade students of Qamdo Primary School -Tibet's first modern primary school - were still immersed in their books, diligently studying for the upcoming junior school entrance examination.

Those who could score high marks on the examination can enroll in schools in other parts of the country to attain better education and fulfill their academic dreams.

In contrast to other mainland schools, these students dress differently with many wearing traditional Tibetan clothing.

Li Dongrui, the school's principal, told the Global Times about 60 percent of students in the school are Tibetans. Programs for all the students are the same, except that Tibetan students are required to study Tibetan language. They also need to take a Tibetan language exam during the junior school entrance examination.

Most of the teachers in the school are Tibetans, so they can provide bilingual teaching to Tibetan students. Students of Han ethnicity have the option to also learn Tibetan language.

The school, founded in 1951, is well-known in Tibet as it was the first school in the region that provided modern education. Throughout history, people there could only get education at monasteries and a few old-fashioned private schools.

Qamdo Primary School initially did not attract many students. Local people who were accustomed to nomadic life were unwilling to send their children to school. There were only three classes which taught more than 60 students with less than 20 teachers.

But a shift has taken place, especially after 2016 when the country started a nationwide targeted poverty alleviation campaign. An unprecedented number of parents are now hoping to send their kids to schools, Pasang Tsering, director of local educational bureau, told the Global Times.

He noted that infrastructure like roads in Tibet has been greatly improved and many families now buy their own cars. The per capital income also increased, which caused a frequent flow of people, he said. With the increased flow of people, people who used to live a remote nomadic life have more chances to be exposed to urban life and the importance of education. Without enough knowledge, many found it challenging to live in the city.

China also released preferential policies toward minority groups in Tibetan schools. Since 2012, Tibet began to offer a free 15-year education program to young Tibetans, a policy to advocate fair education in the less-developed areas. Students here don't need to pay for their educational fees and their living costs at the schools are also covered. For students who did not eat at schools, their families can receive free food supplies.

Growing awareness

Tsering Qoxi graduated from Qamdo Primary School in 1994. In 2003, she returned to the school as a teacher.

She told the Global Times when she first became a teacher, parents were reluctant to send their children, so she had to visit their homes to persuade them to send children to school.

But now, parents are waiting in lines for a place at the school. The school has had to lift their enrollment threshold due to the increasing demand over the past few years. In the past, any student who applied for the school could get enrolled.

Now the school has 38 classes which host more than 2,200 students. Tsering Qoxi said the school does not need to do any promotional work as there are already too many students seeking to attend.

While some Western media outlets smeared China's education of minority groups and claimed it's brainwashing, Tsering Qoxi resolutely slammed such accusations.

She said nobody thought this way as these Western media outlets accused.

"The ordinary people are willing to send children here to study. Ever year when the enrollment season started, some parents whose children are unqualified for the school even waited outside the school gate for weeks [to ask for a place]," she said. "The reason behind this change is they are now aware that studying can truly change lives. In the past, they did not think this way."

A third-grade student named Tenzin Gyatso told the Global Times he wants to get enrolled in other mainland junior high schools, and his dream is to become a solider like his father.

"My life in the school is happy. I make good friends with students of Han ethnicity. We play together. There is no hurdle between Tibetan students and Han students," he said.

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Students attend class at Yiri Ecological Forest School in Qamdo, Southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region. Photo: Xie Wenting /GT

In another boarding school named Yiri Ecological Forest School that the Global Times reporter visited, slogans including "knowledge is power," "education changes lives," are common postings in the hall.

While the school is located at a place far away from the city, it still has nearly 300 students. The village the school sits in only has about 2,000 residents. The school's principal Losang Tsering said that he does not need to worry about whether there are enough students attending schools these days, something he worried about eight years ago.

He said the students returned home once a week and their home can be as far as 35 kilometers. The Global Times reporter also visited the school's classrooms where young students were learning both Putonghua and Tibetan language. While the classroom hardware is not as good as those in metropolitan cities like Beijing, the students there expressed appreciation for the simplicity and availability of books.

Reciting aloud in the classrooms, students demonstrated a strong motivation to change their lives through education.

Ushering in changes

Principal Li came from a school in Tianjin to Qamdo Primary School last year as part of an aid program to the region. She is also the school's first principal coming from outside Tibet.

Li told the Global Times that unlike the school where she taught, Tibetan parents and students here care more about the scores. She hopes to bring in some changes, and cultivate students' comprehensive qualities.

Instead of asking students to just memorize the books, she leads students to think more about the meaning of the books. She also lets students participate more in the classrooms and organizes seminars to train Tibetan teachers at the school to gradually change their pedagogy.

"Teachers [from Tianjin] brought changes to the school," a teacher named Wu Limei said.

In the Yiri Ecological Forest School, the principal Losang Tsering said in addition to study, he also tried to instill environment protection knowledge to the students.

He exhibited a short book in Tibetan language which they compiled to teach environment protection. The school also transformed their toilets into water toilets.

"The environment is the most treasurable resource in Tibet. So I want them to know it and do what they can to protect our land," he said.
 
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Upgraded Tibetan-language search engine, input method software launched
Source: Xinhua| 2020-08-04 14:30:59|Editor: huaxia

XINING, Aug. 4 (Xinhua) -- An upgraded search engine app and input method software designed for Tibetan-speaking users have been officially launched, according to local authorities in northwest China's Qinghai Province.

The search engine yongzin.com was launched in August 2016, which receives an average of 10 million daily visits, said the government of Hainan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Qinghai.

"An AI-based Tibetan word segmentation system has been adopted in the new version of the Yongzin Search app, to improve the recall ratio and precision ratio," said Tselo, director of a Tibetan-language information and technology research center of the Hainan prefecture government.

The newly launched input method software supports input in Tibetan, Chinese and English, with functions including automatic error correction and predictive typing, said Tselo.

Yongzin literally means "master" or "teacher" in the Tibetan language. Its users are scattered throughout China and more than 70 other countries and regions.
 
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Naan production and export helps cut poverty in Xinjiang, China
Sep 1, 2020
New China TV

Naan, a type of flatbread and a staple food in Xinjiang, has been exported to Central Asia. Watch how Xinjiang develops the naan industry to help creat jobs and cut poverty.
 
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Infographic: Tibet Autonomous Region sees substantial development owing to favorable policies, national aid
Source: Global Times Published: 2020/9/8 19:18:40

Editor's Note:

From September 1 to 9, 1965, the First Session of the First People's Congress of Tibet was held. At this session, Tibet Autonomous Region was founded after almost a decade of preparation. In the past half century, the region sitting on the "Roof of the World," known for its harsh environment, has witnessed tremendous changes. This page documents Tibet's remarkable progress in economic development, improving people's livelihoods and boosting tourism.

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Xinjiang expands test of saline soil rice near desert
Source: Xinhua| 2019-06-04 18:27:14|Editor: Yamei

URUMQI, June 4 (Xinhua) -- The saline soil rice R&D team of Yuan Longping, the prestigious pioneer of hybrid rice, is expanding its planting scale on the western margin of the Taklimakan desert in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

The area of the test field, in the township of Bayiawati, Yopurga County under Kashgar, has been expanded to 20 hectares this year from last year's 5.3 hectares, according to Cao Zhishun who leads the Xinjiang team.

Cao said the salinity of the local soil is as high as around 1.7 percent, with a pH value of over eight, indicating a high degree of salinity.

"The saline soil rice can improve soil and lower salinity, and turns saline soil into fertile farmland in three to five years," he said.

The township has a total 1,000 hectares of saline soil that is completely unsuitable for planting, said Alimjan, the township head.

Last year, the yield from the test field exceeded the expectation of Cao's team, making them more sure about the potential of their rice.

Cao said about 1,333,333 hectares, or 30 percent of arable land in Xinjiang, has been salinized at varying degrees, and the value of the saline soil rice in improving soil could be huge.

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Saline soil rice enters harvest season in China's Xinjiang
Oct 14, 2020
New China TV

20 hectares of saline soil rice paddies have entered the harvest season at Bayiawati Township, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
 
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