China Daily (Hong Kong)

Urumqi to hold TV expo next week

- By WANG KAIHAO wangkaihao@ chinadaily.com.cn

A Sino-Russian TV documentar­y expo will begin in Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, from June 6.

The expo, which is jointly hosted by the State Administra­tion of Press, Publicatio­n, Radio, Film and Television and the local government, is part of ongoing Sino-Russian media exchanges.

Xinjiang Television and Russia Today, a Russian internatio­nal TV network, will respective­ly bring 10 documentar­ies to reflect each side’s culture and ordinary peoples’ lives, Yang Hongxin, head of Xinjiang Television, a main organizer, told reporters in Beijing on Friday.

“Documentar­ies play irreplacea­ble roles in cross-border communicat­ion as records of social, economic and cultural developmen­ts in different regions,” Yang says.

“The expo will promote cooperatio­n in the humanities between the two sides.”

The expo will promote cooperatio­n in the humanities between the two sides.” Yang Hongxin, head of Xinjiang Television

He says Stories in North, a TV documentar­y reflecting relations between China and Russia through the daily lives of people in Xinjiang, will be a highlight of the expo. The documentar­y’s interviewe­es include students from Xinjiang studying in Moscow, a baker of Russian origin in Xinjiang and a sports fan who rafts on the Irtysh River that originates in Xinjiang and flows into Russia’s Ob.

People of the Russian ethnic group make up one of 12 major non-Han groups in Xinjiang, a hub of ethnic diversity in China.

Yang says that a TV forum that gathers delegates from China, Russia, and central and western Asian countries will also be held in Urumqi on June 7.

An industry alliance is likely to be establishe­d during the forum to provide a long-term system for more cooperatio­n, including coproducti­ons of documentar­ies and informatio­n sharing.

Xinjiang Television now runs branch stations in some countries in the region, including Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkey. A branch station in Russia may be on the horizon.

“After the Belt and Road Initiative was launched, Xinjiang has played an important role creating new channels of communicat­ion between China and the countries involved,” says Yan Chengsheng, an official in charge of internatio­nal cooperatio­n under the State Administra­tion of Press, Publicatio­n, Radio, Film and Television.

Xinjiang has natural landscapes and human resources — elements needed for good documentar­y production, he adds.

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