Share This

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Emerging China speeding ahead

CERITALAH
By KARIM RASLAN


 
Nation’s developing network of bullet trains is a reflection of the country’s remarkable transformation and the growing technological prowess built on strong historical and cultural foundations.

I WAS in China a few weeks ago. As it happened, I needed to travel from Hangzhou, where I was staying, to Shanghai.

The most practical option was by train, which was how I ended up aboard the CRH380A bullet train at Hangzhou Station.

I had booked a premium seat, only to discover that it was the train’s first day of operation and there were camera crews and journalists hovering around.

Settling in, I noticed a neatly-placed power socket as well as a sheaf of glossy magazines stuffed in the seatback pocket in front of me.

I pulled out one of the magazines at random. The cover revealed an alluring image of Italian movie star Monica Belluci baring a naked shoulder.

Mmm ... clearly, this was not going to be your average train ride.

Completed in just 20 months, the 202km high-speed rail line links the ancient imperial capital (currently China’s premier tourism destination) with the bustling cacophony of Shanghai – made all the more raucous, at the time, by the soon-to-be-closed World Expo.

I was travelling with an artist friend who had studied at the prestigious China Academy of Art, located on the banks of the West Lake in Hangzhou, back in the early 80s.

As a Shanghainese, he remembers, in those days, the same journey took six hours. That morning on the bullet train, we were promised a 45-minute journey.

My friend added that there were slower and less expensive options – the slowest of which took 78 minutes.

As the train pulled out of Hangzhou, I leaned back in my reclining seat, keeping an eagle eye on the speedometer located just above the carriage-doorway.

The acceleration was slow and steady. We quickly reached 150kph, by which stage the scene outside appeared to be passing only moderately swiftly.

However, as the train started touching 250 kph, most of the action appeared to be inside the carriage, as various passengers leapt up to have their photos taken beneath the flickering speedometer.

At 350kph, there was a small line of people waiting to have their photos taken. We were, after all, on the world’s fastest bullet train – yes, way faster than Japan’s Shinkansen.

Glancing outside once again at the suburban sprawl, I marvelled at technology.

Here I was, travelling so fast, and yet it was almost impossible to feel or discern the speed at which I was moving within the hermetically sealed train.

Forty-five minutes after we departed from Hangzhou, we pulled into Hongqiao Station in Shanghai – alongside the domestic airport of the same name.

Recently rebuilt, Hongqiao Station was another colossal structure of marble, glass and steel.

Vast, soaring and cathedral-like, it provided an overwhelming conclusion to our extraordinarily swift rail trip.
China’s fast emerging network of bullet trains is a reflection of the country’s remarkable transformation.

The moniker “Made In China” no longer evokes a sense of inferiority; Chinese technology continues to evolve and improve.

Furthermore the growing technological prowess is built on strong historical and cultural foundations; institutions that have survived and prospered since the Cultural Revolution’s depredations.
Hangzhou encapsulates these forces.

The city combines Southern Song Dynasty era marvels along with trading and manufacturing expertise. On the one hand there are the quintessential Chinese tourist sites – the West Lake, the pagodas and the teahouses – while on the other are vast industrial estates contributing to a GDP that has trebled in the past decade to reach over 520 billion renmenbi (RM243bil).

A culture of scholarship, learning and the arts – embodied in the startlingly lavish China Academy of Arts’ campus – provides a firm foundation for innovation as traditions are both honoured and updated.

Indeed, China’s rise is made all the more complex and indeed resilient because the Middle Kingdom is both increasingly modern and rooted.

The level of self-confidence is drawn from history, culture and contemporary commercial might.

But, as China progresses economically and “spiritually” – with the emphasis on culture and talent, a few questions remain. Can the ruling Communist Party hold off the call for greater civil liberties?

Is prosperity alone enough to satisfy the people? What does the recent furore over the Nobel Peace Prize tells us about China’s current leaders’ state of mind of?

However for the smaller nations of South-East Asia, the challenge is more profound. Indeed the future can look quite harrowing. Where do we fit in?

What is our role vis-a-vis the behemoth that is modern China? Are we going to be little more than a modern tributary state?

Monday, November 22, 2010

World Insight on Dollar Dominance

The printing of more American money is likely to drive down the greenback's value. And there's global concern about the knock-on effects.

Play Video

Feng shui master: Polls likely before May

By WONG PEK MEI  pekmei@thestar.com.my



KUALA LUMPUR: Forget about reading tea leaves or peering into crystal balls. Feng shui master Prof David Koh predicts that the general election will take place before May.

The principal consultant at the Malaysian Institute of Geomancy Sciences said the economic forecast next year indicated that the general election was around the corner.

Future outlook: Koh showing the 2011 Year of the Rabbit Malaysian Institute of Geomancy Sciences Outlook book and the Kansai Environology (Feng Shui) colour book guide at the talk in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.
 
“We forecast that there will be a spike in the country’s economic performance between March and April.

“And this will usually take place before an election,” he told reporters at the 2011 Outlook Talk – Year Of The Rabbit at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre yesterday.

He has a message for the men, too.

“Strong, young women will come to the fore in politics, finance or economy, in the February to March period,” he said.

“Scholars will also gain prominence between April and May. They will either bring fame to Malaysia or contribute to its development,” said Koh.

Asked for their identity, he jokingly said: “I did not ask for their names.”

He also said according to the I-Ching calculations, it was predicted that political leaders were likely to encounter internal problems in their parties.

“Some (problems) are not noticeable now but they are boiling over.

“There will be a lot of pretentious members who will trick their leaders into believing they are good but have their own private agenda,” he said, adding that the internal problems could reach a critical point in August and September.

Contrary to public belief, he said Malaysia would not experience a collapse in the property market next year.

Koh took centrestage when he presented the country’s outlook including the possibility of Dooms­day 2012.

Such a doomsday, he said, would not happen.

On natural disasters, he said heavy rains in the period of February to March might lead to floods in the northern region.