India Today Group Online
 


September 17, 2001
Issue


 

COVER
   

Superstition Or Superscience?
Amid accusations of having saffronised higher education of the country, the Centre approves the teaching of astrology in universities.
Is the Government promoting a
science or a sham?

Science Or Sham?
Even as stargazers claim their knowledge has an empirical basis, scientists debunk it as mumbo-jumbo.

 

 
THE NATION
   

PM's Point Man
Sidelined two years ago, he has bounced back to become one of the most powerful ministers in the NDA.


 
NEIGHBOURS
 

Diverging Tracks
The Gormu-Lhasa railway line will significantly improve China's military logistics capability and exert strategic pressure on India.

 

 
STATES
 

Plane Pique
The Gujarat Government resents the CAG indictment for the purchase of an aircraft.

 

 
OTHER STORIES
     
 



 
 
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NEIGHBOURS: CHINA

Diverging Tracks

The 1,118-km Gormu-Lhasa railway line will significantly improve China's military logistics capability and exert strategic pressure on India

 

FAR FRONTIER: A worker at the railroad site at Gormu

 

China has a long history of politically driven construction projects. The Great Wall was one; the tradition continues. The Three Gorges dam project and the western highway linking its restive regions of Xinjiang with Tibet via the occupied Aksai Chin are recent examples. The 1,118-km Gormu-Lhasa railway link is the latest and perhaps the costliest project to join this growing list of building wonders. These capital-intensive projects have served Beijing's larger interests of internal consolidation apart from the economic development of the regions concerned. While the railway may be part of China's blueprint to control and integrate Tibet, the scheme has fired the imagination of Indian security planners given its strategic and economic ramifications.

Launched this summer and expected to be completed by 2006, the single-track metre-gauge railway link stretches from Gormu City in Qinghai province to Lhasa by breaching the mighty Kulun Shan ranges on the roof of the world. With a plan outlay of $2.34 billion (Rs 10,764 crore), the railway line will pass through 30 tunnels and bridges which alone will cover a distance of 37.5 km. It will be the world's steepest and highest railway line with more than 960 km of the track laid at altitudes over 1,300 ft and nearly 560 km over permafrost earth.

The Indian threat perceptions on the rail link have been bared in a classified Government report that delves into the implications of the project. The report, circulated at the highest levels of the Vajpayee Government, says the railroad connection will significantly improve China's military transport capability in Tibet. According to the Indian assessment, the project, besides linking Lhasa-Beijing-Shanghai by rail, will drastically reduce the travel time from Gormu to the Tibetan capital from 72 hours to 16 hours. It will also provide China an opportunity to annually transport five million tonnes of cargo from mainland China to Tibet and 2.8 million tonnes of mineral resources in the reverse direction. In military terms, the rail link gives China the capability to mobilise up to 12 divisions (12,000 men make a division) a month.


 
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