For the past 50 years or so, benefiting from the concern
of the Central Government and support from the whole nation,
people of all ethnic groups in Tibet have pulled their full
weight to give an earth-shaking new look to Tibet, and have
made achievements in ecological improvement and environmental
protection that have attracted attention worldwide. Tibetan
people today live and work in peace not only with a booming
economy and developing society, but also with their landscape
kept beautiful, their rivers kept clean, their animal species
kept diversified, and their vegetation kept lush. Tibet
has truly become a "Shangri-la."
Rapidly shaking off its traditional backwardness and quickening
its steps toward modernization are the natural requirements
for the progress and development of Tibetan society and
the fervent wish of all the ethnic groups in Tibet. Located
on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, Tibet has a peculiar geographical
environment and a fragile ecosystem. Therefore, it is an
important part of Tibet's progress to modernization and
a strategic choice for sustainable development that Tibet
should protect the regenerative capacity of its natural
resources, improve the quality of its ecological environment,
preserve the integrity and self-adjustment ability of its
natural ecosystem, and ensure the safety of the ecosystem
and the harmonious unity and coordinated development of
Tibet's economy, society and ecosystem.
Ecological improvement and environmental protection in Tibet
cannot be achieved if development steps falter, but nor
should we attain short-term economic development at the
cost of the ecological environment. We can only follow the
law of social development, attach equal importance to both
economic development and eco-environmental protection, giving
attention to protection in the process of development and
seeking development in the process of protection, and implement
the strategy of sustainable development. Ecological improvement
and environmental protection should be done in an active,
thrusting and dynamic manner, and not in a passive, conservative
and closed-door way. We cannot refuse any interaction between
man and natural eco-environment on the excuse of preserving
the fragile primitive natural state, because this will hamper
the economic and social development and the improvement
of people's living standard in Tibet.
The relationship between the exploration and utilization
of natural resources and eco-environmental protection must
be handled properly in the course of the modernization of
Tibet, so as to promote changes in the mode of economic
growth. It is clear from past experience in Tibet that the
exploration and utilization of natural resources must follow
the laws of nature, taking both long-term and overall interests
into consideration, so as to avoid being too eager for quick
success and instant benefits to the extent of over-burdening
the ecological environment. A scientific attitude and methodology
must be adopted in exploring natural resources and protecting
the ecological environment. Natural resources that are not
to be explored and used should be strictly protected, while
the exploration and utilization of needed resources should
be done scientifically with a definite goal, to prevent
any unwanted impact on the ecological functions. Only in
this way can the natural resources in Tibet be utilized
rationally and scientifically, and can economic development
and eco-environmental improvement be achieved simultaneously.
Tibet's ecological improvement and environmental protection,
just as its economic and social development, have a vital
bearing not only on the fundamental interests of the people
of all ethnic groups in Tibet but also on the common interests
of the whole nation. People of all ethnic groups in Tibet
are the major motivators and direct participants in the
ecological improvement and environmental protection work
in Tibet. They are also the main beneficiaries of a well-preserved
ecological environment. Carrying forward such work will
benefit both the State and the people for generations to
come. Starting from the fundamental interests of the Tibetan
people and the fundamental demand of the people of all ethnic
groups across China for common prosperity, over the past
five decades and more the Chinese Central Government and
the local government of Tibet, in a spirit of being highly
responsible for posterity and the world as a whole, have
made tremendous efforts to promote and develop the ecological
improvement and environmental protection work in Tibet,
and have made achievements that have captured worldwide
attention.
The Dalai clique and the international anti-China forces
shut their eyes to the progress in the ecological improvement
and environmental protection work in Tibet. They have spread
rumors all over the world that the Chinese government is
"destroying Tibet's ecological environment," "plundering
Tibet's natural resources" and "depriving the
Tibetan people of their right to subsistence," and
so on and so forth, in order to mislead world public opinion
and deface the image of China. Camouflaging themselves with
pretensions of concern about eco-environmental protection
in Tibet, they want really nothing but to hamper the social
progress and modernization of Tibet and to prepare public
opinion for their political aim of restoring the backward
feudal serfdom in Tibet and splitting the Chinese nation.
It is true that there are still many problems in Tibet's
ecological improvement and environmental protection efforts.
As the whole global ecosystem is deteriorating, the fragile
ecology in Tibet is particularly affected. Mud-rock flows,
landslides, soil erosion, snowstorms and other natural calamities
occur frequently in Tibet and desertification is threatening
the region's eco-environment, compounded by man-made damage
to the ecological environment as Tibet's economy develops.
All these things have attracted much attention from the
Central Government and the local government of Tibet. In
order to ensure the permanent stability of the ecological
environment and natural resources and to guard against possible
new threats to them, the Tibetan local government, supported
by the Central Government, has set up and put into practice
since 2001 a mammoth plan for ecological improvement and
environmental protection. From now until the mid-21st century,
more than 22 billion yuan will be invested in over 160 eco-environmental
protection projects aimed at steadily improving the ecosystem
in Tibet. There is no doubt that the people in Tibet will
create an even more beautiful environment and an even better
life for themselves in the course of their future development.