THISDAY

Sailing Across the Yangtze

Solomon Elusoji who joined a team of reporters to visit China’s Hubei Province recently, writes about the most powerful river in the world

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The sun sparkles in its full glory as we leave the airport and travel across long bridges by bus, swishing past multitudes of lakes and rivers. Hubei has been described as a ‘Province of Lakes’ and its capital, Wuhan, as the ‘City of Rivers’. If there was any doubt about the veracity of these ‘aquatic tags’, it soon disappeare­d as we reach the Yangtze River, Asia’s longest and most powerful river. Today, the Yangtze is quiet, even tranquil; yet, as it ferries boats, large and small, it radiates an authority, a confidence that belongs to things that bristle with so much history, things that have seen so much change and yet survive.

“More than any other river in the world – more even than the Nile, which also cradles an entire country and nurtures a civilisati­on – the Yangtze is a mother-river,” the travel writer, Simon Winchester, has written. “It is the symbolic heart of China.”

This part of the Yangtze River on which we are is where it meets its largest tributary, the Han River and divides Wuhan into three towns: Wuchang, Hankou and Hanyang. We are leaving Hankou and crossing into Wuchang, which is the provincial government’s seat. Wuchang, with its many skyscraper­s and western-themed stores (McDonalds, Walmart, Pizza Hut, etc), is a city under perpetual constructi­on, a notion brought alive by the ubiquity of cranes. Also, like Beijing, where I have lived for much of the past three months, there are rows of bicycles along the sidewalks and the road signs are written in white font, on blue background.

“My first impression is that this is a nice city, nicer than Beijing,” my Egyptian colleague, Hazem Samir, says. “And that’s because it is not crowded like Beijing and feels much more organised.” Hassan is right. Although Wuhan is the most populous city in Central China, housing over 10 million lives, the ratio of its area size to population is much better than China’s combustibl­e capital. Here, too, the air appears to be cleaner, even if just by a fraction.

We check into the hotel – a Renaissanc­e – and leave for lunch. Later in the day, we are driven to the Yellow Crane Tower. “If you come to Wuhan, you have to come here,” our guide, a bright Chinese lady in a white shirt and dark slacks, tells us. The Yellow Crane Tower is what it is – a tower with five levels and roofs that jut out and point to the heavens like some kind of worship. It is the history of the tower, however, that pulls crowds to it. The tower is situated on ‘Snake Hill’ from where, legend has it, an immortal, Wang Zi’an, rode away on a yellow crane. Since it was built sometime in the second century, the tower has been destroyed more than 12 times. The current structure was completed in 1985.

At the fifth level, we stand at the balcony and watch Wuhan spread before us like butter on bread: a city made of blocks of apartment buildings, skyscraper­s and, of course, the Yangtze. From here, the river takes a new shape as it crawls away, downstream, to Shanghai. In a certain way, it appears that the city was made for it.

The sun begins to set and we return to the hotel, where we are met by provincial officials who tell us about the strategic importance of Hubei in modern China, one which is built upon its unique location. And with shiny new ports, expansive and smooth highways, extraordin­ary ambitious airport and railway facilities, Hubei is doing a good job of connecting commerce within China and beyond.

The next morning, we set out for Wuhan East Lake High-Tech Developmen­t Zone (EDZ). The EDZ is one of the high technology developmen­t zones approved by China’s State Council and has brought Wuhan global fame, especially in the area of optic electronic­s and communicat­ion technology. At an exhibition centre in the zone, we are led into a cinema-esque space where we watch, from an elevated balcony, a 3D documentar­y of EDZ’s story. Then we get a tour of the space, which is populated with cutting-edge technologi­es such as agricultur­al drones, biological cameras and innovative optic fibre products.

While China has largely built its prosperity on the back of specialise­d mass manufactur­ing and services usually involving technology imported from the West, Wuhan’s EDZ is a potent sign of its ambition to become a much more sophistica­ted economy driven by the wheels of science and frenetic innovation.

We spend the next morning travelling to nearby Huanggang, where we visit a Poverty Alleviatio­n project in Lijiawan Village. These sort of projects dot the Chinese landscape as the

More than any other river in the world – more even than the Nile, which also cradles an entire country and nurtures a civilisati­on – the Yangtze is a motherrive­r

 ??  ?? The Yangtze is the third longest river in the world
The Yangtze is the third longest river in the world
 ??  ?? A Yellow Crane Tower view of the Yangtze snaking through Wuhan City
A Yellow Crane Tower view of the Yangtze snaking through Wuhan City

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