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New road across China’s largest desert opens for traffic
URUMQI—The second road across
China’s largest desert opened to traffic Thursday, boosting connections
to the landlocked region in the country’s northwest.
The 424-km north-south highway, running across the Taklimakan Desert in
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, cut the distance between the two
important regional cities of Hotan and Aral by 550km and and the travel
time by about seven hours. The 790-million-yuan (107 million U.S.
dollars) project is expected to promote cargo and passenger traffic
between the resource-rich and densely-populated Hotan city, in southern
Xinjiang, and Aral, an underdeveloped new city on the northern edge of
the desert, said Xinjiang’s Chairman Ismail Tiliwaldi at the opening
ceremony.
The blacktop road was funded by the central government. Construction of
the road began in June, 2005. It will provide easier access to the
southwestern Tibet Autonomous Region as well as central and southern
Asian countries such as Pakistan and Tajikistan. It will also speed up
transportation of Hotan’s farm produce to Aksu, a pivotal communications
center, by cutting off 430 km and about half of the time used before.
The first highway across the Taklimakan, running 522 kilometers from
Lunnan in the north, to Minfeng county in the south, was opened to
traffic in 1995. However, vehicles bound for Aksu had to make a detour
along the westernmost border of the desert.
“The new one is wider with less sharp turns than the first road, and the
surface is very smooth,” said Cao Jun, a veteran driver in Xinjiang. The
Taklimakan desert is located in the center of the Tarim Basin south of
the Tianshan Mountains, covering 337,600 square kilometers. Builders
spent 29 months in the desert, fighting surface temperatures of up to 80
degrees Celsius in summer and continuous sandstorms.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |