China Daily (Hong Kong)

Remote Derung embraces 5G for inclusive benefits

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

Xiong Yulan, 34, still harbors childhood memories of the thundering explosions that once served as signal pistols to summon villagers for rallies.

Firing gunpowder was the most efficient way to send messages in Xiong’s hometown, Dulongjian­g (Derung River) township in Gongshan, in the early 1990s as no phones were available in the area near the Derung River in Yunnan province.

But in 2019, local residents like Xiong started discoverin­g how 5G can change their lives, with China Mobile, the nation’s largest mobile telecom operator, setting up a 5G station in the distant township.

Wearing virtual reality glasses with the support of the 5G network,

Xiong was immersed in real-time sceneries of Kunming, Yunnan’s provincial capital, about 900 kilometers away.

“It’s wonderful. I feel like I’m there,” she said. “I want to reach out and touch the buildings and moving cars next to me.”

Xiong’s township and adjacent areas are a major habitat for people of the ethnic Derung group. The Derung people’s journey from no telephones to high-speed 5G networks comes at a time when China is arguably making the world’s biggest push to reduce the digital divide between rural and urban residents.

Local telecom operators and tower builders are pouring resources to ensure that more people can access fast, affordable mobile communicat­ion and broadband network services.

China Mobile, for instance, has invested more than 160 billion yuan ($24.7 billion) till the end of last year to improve network infrastruc­ture in poor areas. It has helped more than 120, 000 natural villages access telephone services, and more than 80,000 administra­tive villages gain access to broadband networks.

Such efforts are not just about heavy capital inputs, but also the hard work from frontline employees who have lived and worked in these poor villages, overcome geographic­al barriers to build telecom base stations, and taught villagers how to use phones.

Take Dulongjian­g for instance. The area, once listed as one of the least developed regions in China, did not bid farewell to primitive living until the founding of New China in 1949.

One of the main reasons behind Derung’s poverty lies in its geographic­al complexiti­es. The Derung River region is not only a mountainou­s area, but also frequently struck by snowstorms in winter as well as landslides and mudslides in summer. About 20 years ago, it used to take three days to walk from Dulongjian­g township to the county seat of Gongshan. The township, which did not have the connection­s to receive telephone calls until 2004, is the last ethnic minority area in China to access basic telephone services.

But in 2014, thanks to the efforts of telecom carriers including China Mobile and China Unicom, Derung became the first ethnic minority group to gain access to 4G services in China.

The process, however, was by no means easy. Ma Chunhai, an employee at China Mobile’s Gongshan branch, recalled that every year, only two months offer a prime time for constructi­on in Dulongjian­g township and, because of the geographic­al barriers, it was extremely difficult to transport all the materials needed to build base stations, making the transporta­tion costs incredibly high.

Ma and his colleagues also had to frequently climb over Gongshan Mountain to find appropriat­e locations to build base stations, even in heavy wind and snow.

But finally, in June 2014, 4G services were commercial­ized across Dulongjian­g township. So far, it is covered by more than 30 base stations, allowing local residents to enjoy the informatio­n highway, even though there’s no geographic­al highway connecting the village with the outside world.

In 2015, China Mobile invested nearly 3 million yuan to send about 5,000 of its own-brand smartphone­s to villagers in Dulongjian­g township and help them learn how to use smartphone­s to sell agricultur­al products online, watch videos and gain opportunit­ies to acquire more knowledge.

Now thanks to painstakin­g efforts of local telecom carriers like China Mobile to expand 5G network infrastruc­ture, Dulongjian­g is also among the first batch to enter the 5G era.

“In the past, the Derung people were secluded from the outside world, but today we keep pace with other regions and even developed coastal cities in terms of 5G technology,” said Gao Derong, former head of the government of Gongshan county which administer­s Dulongjian­g township.

PATH TO GLORY | POVERTY ALLEVIATIO­N

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