China Daily Global Edition (USA)
SE Asia on high-speed track to prosperity
One after another, Southeast Asian countries are joining hands with China to build high-speed railways. The latest such project is a 688-kilometer high-speed railway along the eastern coast of Malaysia, for which the groundbreaking ceremony was held on Aug 10. Last week, media reports said China and Thailand will sign a contract on a railway project linking Kunming, capital of Southwestern China’s Yunnan province, and Bangkok, during Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-ocha’s official visit to China next month. Work on the project is expected to start in October.
Apart from these projects, Chinese companies are building the Jakarta-Bandung highspeed railway in Indonesia and the one linking China and Laos. And both Malaysia and Singapore have welcomed Chinese companies to bid for a highspeed railway linking the two countries.
These projects are like silk threads connecting China and Southeast Asian countries and the best testimony to the progress the Belt and Road Initiative has made in Southeast Asia.
A key part of the Belt and Road Initiative is interconnectivity of roads, and building or improving existing cross-border transportation networks is a prerequisite for closer regional cooperation and people-to-people exchanges.
Unfortunately, many Southeast Asian countries still lag behind in terms of modern transportation infrastructure, which has hindered their economic development. Take Thailand for example. The country with a population of less than 70 million received about 40 million tourists last year, of which one-fourth were from China. Yet only one train plies between Bangkok and Pattaya, two of Thailand’s most popular cities, from Monday to Friday. Moreover, the trains often take three to four hours to cover a distance that can be negotiated in an hour by a high-speed train. This lack of modern traffic infrastructure is preventing Thailand from fulfilling its development potential. acquires added importance because it could well be the last documentary on their lives, as 14 of the 22 women had died by the time the documentary was released on Aug 14, International Day for “Comfort Women”. Perhaps that’s why it has caught the imagination of the nation.
An outstanding feature of the 95-minute documentary is that it does not focus only on the women’s heartrending memories, but attaches equal importance to recording their state of mind at the time of the shooting.
The women send a clear message to the world through their plain discourse and composed smiles that they can live with the past, regarding it as a distasteful yet inalienable part of their lives.
A widowed farmer in Guilin, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, bow-backed Wei Shaolan, 93, lived with her 77-year-old “Japanese” son, whose biological father was one of her “violators” during her three-month “nightmare”, in the remote mountains so that they could escape the taunts and humiliating comments of the people. They felt somewhat at peace, though neither said it openly, after many of the people who rubbed salt into their
In comparison, China has been continuously developing its transportation infrastructure for decades. By last year, China had high-speed trains running across 22,000 km, accounting for more than 65 percent of the world’s total. High-speed trains have not only made traveling more convenient and comfortable for passengers, but also earned global praise — that is why high-speed rail is considered one of the “four new great inventions” of China.
Southeast Asian countries, such as China, have huge populations that need to frequently travel from one place to another, yet they have comparatively small budgets for transportation infrastructure, which would be more suited to building high-speed railways.
And because of its mature high-speed train technology and rich experience, China could help Southeast Asian countries in this regard — a move that will be beneficial to the local people. More important, the cooperation between China and those countries in infrastructure building will be mutually beneficial.
After 20 years of developing the sector, China today holds the intellectual property rights for its high-speed railways, and has established technological standards that would suit other developing countries equally well.
By 2030, China expects to build eight longitudinal and eight parallel high-speed train lines to have in place a comprehensive high-speed railway network. At that time, Chinese companies will have more time, energy and resources at their disposal to help Southeast Asian neighbors build their own high-speed railway networks.
For Southeast Asian countries, an efficient high-speed railway will not only improve their transportation infrastructure, but help cultivate more engineering talent and thus boost their economies. And after Southeast Asian countries are connected with one another through high-speed railways, the region’s economic integration will intensify.
The Belt and Road Initiative has created new opportunities for China and Southeast Asian countries to work together, for instance, through high-speed railway construction.
These projects are like silk threads connecting China and Southeast Asian countries and the best testimony to the progress the Belt and Road Initiative has made in Southeast Asia.
The author is an associate professor at School of International Relations, Nanjing University.