China Daily

High-speed train plan follows tracks of history

- By WANG XIAOYU wangxiaoyu@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s latest proposal to help build Panama’s railways is a proposed high-speed line connecting the country’s capital with the western province of Chiriqui, which borders Costa Rica.

China’s involvemen­t in Panamanian railroads goes back more than 160 years to the many Chinese workers who were hired to help build the interocean­ic railroad starting in 1849, before the Panama Canal was built to connect the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

Just five months after the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties in June last year, the two countries signed a collaborat­ion memorandum to promote cooperatio­n in technology and enhance the role of China’s financial institutio­ns in Panama’s rail network, according to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, China’s top economic planner.

In December last year, China’s Ministry of Commerce confirmed it would finance a feasibilit­y study for a railway connecting Panama City with David, the capital of Chiriqui province.

The study will analyze the viability, benefits, technical parameters and other factors involved in building a rail system.

The train would reduce travel time for passengers and freight between Chiriqui province and the national capital, which can take eight to 10 hours on the Pan-American Highway, as well as serve cities along its route. Flights between David and Panama City take about an hour.

“The new railway is expected to greatly cut travel time and thus facilitate the movement of agricultur­al products along the route. It will bring convenienc­e to travelers who want to transfer at the capital’s airport,” said Mai Qijia, director of the Panama Associatio­n for the Promotion of Peaceful Reunificat­ion of China.

The plan to build a new railway comes at a time when efforts have been made to commemorat­e the first group of Chinese workers to arrive in Panama in the mid-19th century and the subsequent peopleto-people ties that have grown between Chinese and Panamanian­s.

Records from the Overseas Chinese Affairs Office of the State Council show that about 4,000 Chinese workers were hired by a company from the United States to work on what is now called the Panama Canal Railway from 1849 to 1854.

“Some died on the ship to Panama, and some died of tropical diseases or lived under extremely miserable conditions,” Mai said.

As a result of those early Chinese workers and others that arrived later, people of Chinese ancestry are a significan­t minority group in Panama. Their descendant­s have spread out to other nations in the Americas.

For years the Panamanian government didn’t acknowledg­e the contributi­ons made by Chinese, and years of exclusiona­ry laws against Chinese people hampered the search for the workers’ bodies, Mai said.

However, people of Chinese ancestry in Panama have shown their capability to boost developmen­t and have built friendship­s.

In 2010, Mai participat­ed in a mission that eventually located the graves of many missing workers. Each was marked with a block of stone inscribed with an employee number.

“The scene was heart-wrenching,” Mai said. Chinese associatio­ns in Panama collected money to inter the remains according to the customs of Guangdong province, the home of the majority of the workers.

Memorials have also been built in memory of Chinese workers in Panama, erected not only as a remembranc­e of history but also as a testament to the advancing cooperatio­n between the countries.

“I am looking forward to seeing China utilize its experience in building bullet trains and freight trains to help ramp up Panama’s infrastruc­ture,” Mai said.

“Nowadays, there are mutual interests in cooperatio­n. I understand that issues like different labor laws and land-use regulation­s might pose challenges in the process of building the new railway, but we believe in the potential of China’s involvemen­t in Panama.”

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