China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Cross-border train to boost trade and relations with Laos

The opening of the service is set to bring prosperity to people in both countries. Luo Wangshu reports from Vientiane.

- Wang Jujie, Meng Zhe, and Xu Panyiru contribute­d to this story. Contact the writer at luowangshu@chinadaily.com.cn

What can a high-quality railway bring to a lessdevelo­ped region? China has answered that question with decades of efforts to build railways across the country, and those efforts have borne fruit.

An efficient transporta­tion network boosts the movement of people and freight nationwide, driving local developmen­t in several fields, such as logistics, tourism and trade, and also promotes urban developmen­t and economic growth.

Now, China has handed Laos the key to economic growth by building a modern railway in the country.

The China-Laos Railway, which China helps operate, has turned Laos from a landlocked country into a land-linked hub in Southeast Asia.

It was built according to Chinese management and technical standards, and is a landmark project of the Belt and Road Initiative.

The 1,035-kilometer cross-border line, which has a designed speed of 160 km per hour, links Vientiane, the capital of Laos, to Kunming, capital of Southwest China’s Yunnan province, and then links with China’s national railway network.

Travelers and cargo from every place the railway network extends in China can take the line to Laos, while passengers and freight are also carried in the other direction, of course.

The railway, which commenced operations on Dec 3, 2021, has driven significan­t growth in Laos’ passenger and freight transporta­tion sector.

As of April 18, the cross-border railway had handled 14.43 million passenger trips and 18.8 million metric tons of cargo, according to China Railway Kunming Group and the LaosChina Railway Co, the line’s operators, on Wednesday.

Welcome developmen­t

Meanwhile, on April 13, it opened an internatio­nal passenger service — a long-awaited developmen­t for people on both sides of the border. The service had not been offered before because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now, passengers can travel between Kunming and Vientiane in 10 1/2 hours, including inspection­s at customs clearance stations at the respective borders.

According to China Railway Kunming Group, the line’s internatio­nal service handled 2,326 cross-border passenger trips between April 13 and 18.

As a landmark BRI infrastruc­ture project, the railway aims to promote the movement of people and cargo between the two countries, and further play a role as a key corridor to boost communicat­ions in the Southeast Asia region, facilitati­ng areas such as trade and logistics.

It also provides new opportunit­ies for people in both countries, boosts economic potential and showcases how the BRI is a win-win endeavor.

“The service has not only further facilitate­d the flow of people and trade between China and Laos, but also presses the ‘accelerato­r pedal’ for the recovery of tourism and other industries, and injects new impetus to promote developmen­t between the two countries,” said Wang Wenbin, spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

“The China-Laos Railway is a model project of China and the members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations who are working on the BRI and promoting regional economic integratio­n.”

This year marks the 10th anniversar­y of the BRI, and China will continue to cooperate with ASEAN members to promote the initiative and benefit 2 billion people in the region, he added.

Su Yisheng, an expert in Southeast Asian relations with the Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences, said: “The China-Laos Railway, especially the cross-border passenger service, makes travel between Kunming and Vientiane very convenient. Compared with spending more than 40 hours on a cross-border bus, it is much more comfortabl­e for people to travel by train. It benefits those with travel needs between the two countries, such as students, tourists and businesspe­ople.”

He quoted a World Bank estimate that Laos’ GDP will rise by 21 percent as a result of the constructi­on and operation of the China-Laos Railway, adding that the line will create more jobs for Laotian people.

“It is a win-win project for China and Laos, and has already benefited people on both sides,” he said.

Although Laos had a 3.5-km-long railway along its border with Thailand before the opening of the China-Laos Railway, many local people see the latter as the country’s first railway, and have spoken about it and are proud of it.

The railway stretches 422.4 km within Laos, linking the northern border city of Boten and Luang Prabang and Vang Vieng, popular tourism sites, with Vientiane.

“The China-Laos Railway will make Laos a bridge between China and Southeast Asian countries, and in general a link between Laos and the world,” said Suanesavan­h Vignaket, Laos’ minister of informatio­n, culture and tourism.

Bouncier Tangsinsom­yong, a 50-year-old tour guide in Vientiane, said he had longed for the internatio­nal passenger service to open.

“It’s such good news for us, and I am looking forward to visitors coming,” he said. “We Laotians are used to living a leisurely lifestyle. We do not hurry, we take our time, but that doesn’t mean we don’t want developmen­t. We also want our country to be better, more convenient, like China,” he said.

Not only have local people praised the service, internatio­nal tourists also see it as a convenient link.

“It was fast, efficient and pleasant,” said Stuart Hart, who was visiting Laos from the United Kingdom and shared his firsthand experience as a passenger on the railway. He has taken the service twice.

Hart, who lived in Shanghai for two years, said the service was as good as those he experience­d in China, while Juliet and Dean O’Reilly, also from the UK, said Vientiane Railway Station is big and beautiful.

Employment opportunit­ies

The railway is also bringing jobs for local people. Vongthong Somphavath, a former tour guide from the tourist hot spot of Lang Prabang, said she is proud to be a conductor on a regular train on the line. She lost her job because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the China-Laos Railway project offered her another opportunit­y, and it is a nice opening, she said.

“It’s a pretty stable job and the salary is decent,” the 26-year-old said, adding that some of her friends also want to join the company and have asked her advice.

La Thor, a 23-year-old who works maintainin­g a section of the railway in Luang Prabang, received training from a Chinese civil engineer. He said he wants to be Lao’s Zhan Tianyou, aka Jeme Tien-Yow, who is known as the “Father of China’s Railways” for his contributi­on to the sector.

 ?? ??
 ?? WENYAO / XINHUA YANG YONGQUAN / XINHUA ?? The cross-border passenger train D888 runs on the Ganlanba Bridge of the China-Laos Railway in Xishuangba­nna Dai autonomous prefecture, Southwest China’s Yunnan province, on April 13. Chinese staff members help train an assistant driver from Laos (right) to prepare for the departure of the first Vientiane to Kunming passenger train at Vientiane Railway Station, Laos, on April 13. Passengers of the D887 train, which departed from Kunming, Yunnan, arrive at the station in Vientiane on April 13.
WENYAO / XINHUA YANG YONGQUAN / XINHUA The cross-border passenger train D888 runs on the Ganlanba Bridge of the China-Laos Railway in Xishuangba­nna Dai autonomous prefecture, Southwest China’s Yunnan province, on April 13. Chinese staff members help train an assistant driver from Laos (right) to prepare for the departure of the first Vientiane to Kunming passenger train at Vientiane Railway Station, Laos, on April 13. Passengers of the D887 train, which departed from Kunming, Yunnan, arrive at the station in Vientiane on April 13.
 ?? XING GUANGLI / XINHUA JIANG ??
XING GUANGLI / XINHUA JIANG
 ?? ?? From left:
From left:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States