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China Mobile sets up on Mount Everest
BEIJING—China’s largest cell phone service provider successfully tested
a transmission station on Mount Everest on Tuesday, making it possible
for climbers and those on next year’s Olympic torch relay to make calls,
a state news agency reported.
China Mobile had to hire yaks and porters to help transport equipment up
to the station site at 21,325 feet, the Xinhua News Agency said.
The new station, along with two other China Mobile stations at 17,060
feet and 19,095 feet, would provide cell phone service along the entire
Mount Everest climbing route, Xinhua said. It would also be put into use
during next year’s Olympic torch relay, which will take the flame to the
29,035-foot summit.
A worker called the cell phone of China Mobile general manager Wang
Jianzhou on Tuesday afternoon and had a clear signal, Xinhua quoted an
unnamed company spokesman as saying.
The construction was “incredibly difficult” because the oxygen level was
only 38 percent of what it would be on the ground, the spokesman said.
Immediately after the call to Wang, workers began packing away the
equipment for the winter, Xinhua said. The station will be reassembled
before the Olympic torch relay next summer.—Agencies
An official with Tibet Mobile, the Tibetan subsidiary of China Mobile,
said the station would operate based on the needs of mountaineers and
scientists, Xinhua reported. It was not known whether the two other
stations operate on a continuous basis.
Phones rang unanswered at China Mobile’s headquarters in Beijing on
Tuesday evening. The Lhasa office of China Mobile did not have a listed
telephone number.
Organizers of the Beijing Games plan to stage the longest torch relay in
Olympic history — a 85,000-mile, 130-day route that would cross five
continents.
Taking the torch up Everest is technically challenging. Aside from the
physical challenge of climbing the mountain, which straddles the border
of Nepal and Chinese-controlled Tibet, the torch had to be designed to
burn in bad weather, low pressure and high altitude.
While Beijing hopes the feat will impress the world, groups critical of
China’s often harsh 57-year rule over Tibet have decried the torch route
as a stunt meant to lend legitimacy to Chinese control.
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