China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tracking their future career

Laotian engineerin­g students and railway interns team up with their Chinese peers to document and promote the soon-to-be completed China-Laos rail project, Xing Yi reports.

- Contact the writer at xingyi@chinadaily.com.cn

Given that Laos currently has just one 3.5-kilometer rail route in operation, it is difficult for many of the country’s natives, like Likhamsouy­iaseng Tong, to imagine a service that connects the capital city of Vientiane with China.

“I used to ask myself: Will such a railway appear? If yes, when?” says Tong, who started studying at the Shanghai Institute of Technology two years ago. “But my doubts are gone now that the China-Laos railway is about to open.”

All 67 communicat­ion towers along the China-Laos railway were completed in May, and work on the longest bridge along the route, the 7.53 km Phonethong Bridge, finished in June, according to Xinhua News Agency.

The constructi­on of the project started in December 2016 and operation of the railway is slated to start in December. The railway will reduce the travel time between Vientiane and the border station of Boten from a two-day drive to a three-hour train journey.

Tong is one of the 25 students from

Souphanouv­ong University in Laos who are currently studying engineerin­g at the Shanghai institute to become railway experts. Eight of them are currently working as interns in companies that are involved in the constructi­on of the railway.

Even before the railway is able to facilitate exchanges between the two countries, the students themselves have already been doing so.

On June 24, the Belt and Road Lancang-Mekong Railway Connectivi­ty Center was co-founded by the Shanghai Institute of Technology, the Shanghai People’s Associatio­n for Friendship with Foreign Countries, Souphanouv­ong University, China Railway Academy Co and the China Railway 24th Bureau Group Shanghai Railway Co.

The first project of the center was the “virtual tour of the China-Laos railway”, which features a video series in which Chinese and Laotian students at the institute share stories from their internship and introduce places of interest along the route taken by railway.

The first video of the series was released on the WeChat account Zhonglao Tielutong, or China-Laos Railway Connection. In a three-minute video, Laotian student La Thor introduces the Belt and Road Initiative and the railway project in his native language.

“The constructi­on of the China-Laos railway is a main infrastruc­ture project of the Belt and Road Initiative, and it will also be an economic and cultural exchange platform,” he says. “The Chinese will be able to enjoy our country’s beautiful scenery along the railway, and Laotian people can ship their local produce to China through the railway.

“I have experience­d the convenienc­e of the railway after coming to Shanghai to study, so I really want my countrymen to enjoy the convenienc­e and economic benefits of the China-Laos railway. I also want my Chinese friends to come and learn more about Laos when the line is open,” he adds.

Chinese student Chen Jiacong says, “This summer, we will also go to the constructi­on sites with our Laotian classmates and interview the locals to find out their expectatio­ns for the railway. We will then share their thoughts, and the local cultures we discover, on the internet.”

Besides the virtual tour, a MOOC (massive open online courses) classroom will also be launched on the institute’s e-learning platform to help students in the Mekong region gain knowledge related to railway systems. Its courses will include an introducti­on to railway engineerin­g, rail transporta­tion and Shanghai’s urban developmen­t, including case studies from the constructi­on of the China-Laos railway.

Guo Qingsong, Party chief of the Shanghai Institute of Technology, says the students are goodwill ambassador­s between the two countries, and that the institute will continue to provide training for the Laotian students so that they can become the trailblaze­rs of future railroad constructi­on efforts in Laos.

I have experience­d the convenienc­e of the railway after coming to Shanghai to study, so I really want my countrymen to enjoy the convenienc­e and economic benefits of the China-Laos railway.”

La Thor, Laotian student studying at the Shanghai Institute of Technology

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 ??  ?? Laotian students doing internship­s at companies involved in the constructi­on of the China-Laos railway. They are among a total of 25 students from Souphanouv­ong University in Laos who are currently studying engineerin­g at the Shanghai Institute of Technology.
Laotian students doing internship­s at companies involved in the constructi­on of the China-Laos railway. They are among a total of 25 students from Souphanouv­ong University in Laos who are currently studying engineerin­g at the Shanghai Institute of Technology.
 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Left and right:
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Left and right:

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