
Southwest China's Tibet autonomous region will earmark 1.5 billion yuan (238 million U.S. dollars) on road construction for easier access to the region's monasteries, traffic authorities said Sunday.
By 2015, asphalt roads will to be extended to more than 70 percent of the region's monasteries with the help of the funds, said a written statement issued by the region's traffic transportation department.
Road access to every monastery of the region is expected to be available by 2020, the statement said.
Tibet has more than 1,700 registered monasteries and venues for religious activities with about 46,000 monks and nuns, government statistics show.
The plateau region is known as "the roof of the world" with an average altitude of over 4,000 meters, and road construction is more difficult and costly than other parts of China.
From: Xinhua
(Editor:黄蓓蓓)
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Photos
Residents enjoy a gala show at a park in Lhasa to celebrate the freedom of serfs on Wednesday, the fourth Serfs Emancipation Day in the Tibet autonomous region. (China Daily/Liu Xiangrui)
People of Tibetan ethnic group dance to celebrate the upcoming Serfs Emancipation Day at Zhaba Village in Shannan prefecture, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 26, 2012. The Serfs Emancipation Day on March 28 commemorates the 1959 democratic reform in Tibet, which ended feudal serfdom and freed about one million Tibetan serfs. (Xinhua/Chogo)
The road from Nagqu to Lhasa is considered as one leading people into the paradise on earth. (Photo by Duagi)
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