There is a new garden city, and it isn’t Bangalore

First impression is the best impression, goes the old jungle saying. And China, with its pitiable reputation for the environment, is making ultra-sure that television audiences and spectators don’t get any other impression but the very best in the manner in which they are pulling out all stops for the Beijing Olympics.

In this, the third of a six-part series, “Our Man in China” T.J.S. George describes the green revolution that took place on red soil when he stepped out of his hotel room for a few hours one day, last month.

***

By T.J.S. GEORGE in Beijing

In this bestirred capital city, the Olympics began long ago.

The official approach to it has also brought out one commonality between China and India—faith in numerology and vaastu, in what is auspicious and what is not.

The most auspicious of all numbers in the Chinese tradition is 8. Therefore the opening ceremony will start precisely at 8 seconds past 8.08 pm on the 8th day of the 8th month of 2008.

Actually the manner and scale in which the Olympics is being organised say a great deal about the national character of the Chinese people—their pride in China, their vision for the future, their planning genius, their organising capabilities, their aesthetic excellence, above all, their intense desire to be liked and
appreciated by the rest of the world.

All nations hosting the Olympics use it as an occasion to display national glory. China has followed the tradition by putting up some futuristic buildings as the main venues for the Games. The central stadium is already a topic of discussion around the world as the “bird’s nest” (in picture). The swimming events will be held in a structure that looks like it is made of water.

For the Chinese, though, all of Beijing is an Olympics venue.

That is the kind of attention they are paying to every nook and corner of the place and to every nearby attraction, from the Ming Tombs to the Great Wall. And they are doing it with a speed that is astonishing.

I stayed in a hotel close to the Bird’s Nest. A large area nextdoor was being levelled by excavators, apparently for landscaping. One morning when I left the hotel, a “JCB” was digging some holes. In the evening when I returned, the whole area had become a beautifully laid-out garden with fully grown trees and large flowerbeds. The flowers, big hydrangias and azalias and petunias in bright reds, yellows and violets, were swinging in the wind.

All over Beijing instant forests and gardens are coming up. Big trees, their trunks wrapped in gunny bags or tightly wound ropes, are transplanted from faraway places. Roadside landscaping and medians are living works of art, miles of roses and chrysanthemums beckoning you as you drive past.

They don’t call Beijing a Garden City. But it is.

The greening of Beijing is part of the environmental policy adopted as part of the Olympics commitment. In all 28 million trees have been planted in the city. All Olympics buildings are lighted by solar power. All factories in the city centre have been closed and inhabitants of three lakh odd houses rehabilitated outside the city. There were no protests as there was in Delhi when the courts ordered closure of some old factories in the inner city.

Communism has its uses, especially when it is purposeful communism accepted by the people as such.

Beijing’s notorious pollution is said to be already under control. They have announced plans to allow only one-third of the city’s registered vehicles to be out on the road on any given day. From July 20, the massive construction industry will stop, not just in Beijing, but in nearby areas as well, to ensure good air quality for the athletes.

The cigarette industry is also dislocated. Smoking is a national habit in China. Paramount leaders like Mao Zedong and Deng Hsiaoping were chain smokers.

The supreme sacrifice of curbing smoking is already under way. Even in the restricted rooms where smoking is permitted, they have fitted nano air filters have to break cigarette smoke down to harmless particles before it is released into the atmosphere.

They have another national habit—spitting. The traditional belief is that phlegm is evil and must never be retained in the body. Singapore ended the habit by imposing heavy punishment on offenders. China is currently trying persuasion. What is called the Capital Ethics Development Office has distributed to local people two million booklets on how to behave in public places.

It is all about smiling, queueing, not littering and of course not spitting.

Perhaps no people who hosted Olympics in the past were as eager for the Games to succeed as the Chinese now are. More than with any other people, it is for them an issue of national pride. They want the Games to proceed without a hitch. And they want the visitors to go back with happy memories. They want the athletes in particular to remember the Beijing Olympics as something special.

The medals this year will be more precious than any that were presented in previous games. The gold medals for example will have gold only on one side. On the other side will be white jade, the finest and costliest of China’s most precious gem. A usual Olympics gold medal costs around $200 (approximately Rs 8,000). This year’s gold-and-jade medal will cost $800 (Rs 32,000).

To the world’s greatest sports stars that will be a permanent reminder of China.

Nearly two million visitors are expected to visit Beijing for the Olympics. If you are planning to be one of them, think again.

A city tour that now costs 500 yuan will cost 1000 yuan in July-August. Hotel rooms will be three and four times more expensive. Tickets for the opening ceremony have already hit record levels in the black market. One taxi driver in Beijing told me that the going rate was $20,000 for a ticket. That is about nine lakh rupees.

No Olympics is worth that.

Tomorrow: What the service apartment manager Anna told me

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22 Responses to “There is a new garden city, and it isn’t Bangalore”

  1. Shiva Says:

    pl stop this nonsense of china praising everyday.

    This are diffrent in democratic setup than a communist setup.

    Do you write about plight of people who are displaced because of development in china.
    I am not giving excuse nor saying india is great. We have our own constraints to wok.

  2. Dr. Sree Reddy Says:

    Mr George has not opened his eyes and seen what is happening in China.
    I was in Beijing this year March for 10 days. I was staying near Foreign Languages University, close to central district.
    The roads were littered and with many unemployed people. Spitting was common. Does he want me to belive that China changed in few months, what they could not achieve in decades of ‘communist’ rule? Miracles!!
    Markets/roads were stinking of bad smell probably of some chemicals.
    Though there are many high rise builidings in many areas that may have reduced housing problems. But they are built on destroying century old Chinese traditional housing “Hu-Tong”s.
    Many Chinese are still fighting with authorities to keep their traditonal housing but in vain.
    China like any communist regime puts up “good shows” and controls flow of information. You can access many English websites in China.
    I am sure Mr George’s writing is come under some kind of clippings from the Communists. All praises!
    If you have access to interior China or if you can read books in Japanese or Korean or Taiwanese, you will know the harsh realities of China.

    He should know Bengaluuru will always remain a Garden City to us.

  3. poli kitty Says:

    Is Mr.George a CPI/CPM member from Kerala.

    Let us talk about developments in Kerala &WB than People’s Repblic of China.

    I request again editor of churmuri to stop behaving like a sponsored agent of China.

  4. ptcbus Says:

    A free and open blog like yours and many others in India would not be possible in China. What would you want? Olympic games or absence of freedom?

  5. Anon Says:

    Churumuri has become a site for praising commies. In trying to present their secular or ‘sickular’ credentials, it has gone overboard by presenting articles by anti-Hindu TJS George.

  6. Dr. Sree Reddy Says:

    I made a mistake in my last post.

    You can access many English websites should be read as “You can not access many English websites in China”.
    There is always a watch on you.
    It is sickening to see people praising communist regime’s (mis)rule.

  7. soumya Says:

    China seems to be leading a ‘Dr.Jekyll & Mr.Hyde’ sort of life.After going thro’ all the above, it seems like China’s people have gone through a lot to present a ‘non-tootu dose’ to the world! Old habits die hard and it is to be seen after the Olympics if the litter/ stink/ spit suffered by Dr.Sree make a comeback!

  8. Another One Says:

    @poli kitty

    Thanks for the pointer, was wondering why would some one be hell bent to prove the chinese are better.

    Am wondering whats coming in the next 3 posts, any guesses? My take

    1. Law and Order
    2. Social Responibility
    3. Redtape.

  9. mayura Says:

    Reminds me of how USSR used to project itself, in 70s and 80s, by freely distributing promotional magazines, showing “OH SO beautiful Russia” flowing with milk and honey and how everything is spik and span, and how russians are leading a happy and prosperous lives, till Gorbachev’s Perestroika and Glasnost, exposed what shambles Russia was in.

    The same thing applies to China. Except for Shanghai and Beijing, every other part of China is in utter penury and deprivation. You just have to talk to a honest Chinese from mainland China, to know the true picture.

    TJS George is confirmed commie like N Ram, who spares no effort to paint a rosy picture of his masters country.

    It is supper time George, start your singing.

    :)

  10. Anonymous Guy Says:

    To all the commentors who post about that a misleading picture is being painted by the article, there are a couple of facts which cannot be waved away as ‘propaganda’:
    1. China is hosting the Olympic games in 2008.
    2. China will win a number of medals in the Olympic games.

    Of course you can counter this with the lame ‘we are a democracy, we cannot bring about discipline or efficiency using their methods’. It might make you feel good, but it wont change reality.

  11. Ishweshwaraih Says:

    Whether Mr George is a commie or not there are some lessons to learn for us in Bengaluru. What happened to the Vanamahotsava tree planting which was done with great gusto duroing the time of RK Hegde.
    Trees dont spring up overnight. It needs planning and foresight. Going by the way the glass building and land encroachments in namma bengaluru we will be a full fledged concrete jungle with no green in the next decade.
    Lets learn something from these cities whether it is beijing or bijapur it does not matter. Lets be open and lets hope our leaders get some foresight.

  12. Vijaya Says:

    Guys accept the facts for what they are. If Beijing is doing it, well, accept it and see if you can get your netas to replicate at least a small part of that. China is planting trees, not saplings; we are removing all that’s green. TJS is opening our eyes to the way China thinks and acts, and how! Let’s look at the glass for what it has, not for what it hasn’t. By belittling the very impressive work that Chinese have done and running down the author, most of us are only rationalising the gargantuan inefficiency and corruption of our political leaders.

  13. aruna urs Says:

    Rightly said Anon Guy. Democracy cannot be used as an excuse for missing infrastructure.

  14. Dr. Sree Reddy Says:

    @ Vijaya navare
    Do you think Chinese officials are not corrupt and ineffcient?

    Do you think American politicians are not corrupt?

    In India anything “foreign” is great and there is no corruption in those countries. If you live there you would no, not much difference between our leaders and their leaders. At least our society is free.
    Olymoics gives the money to beautify venue of Olympic Games!!

    China like any communist givernments manages and puts up ‘ good image ‘ of its country. Everything in China is “managed” and “controlled”.

  15. Another One Says:

    @ EveryBody who says to learn from the chinese

    Agreed that there is a lot we in India need to do. But I do not want one more example and that too of china. We have seen enough examples in the history where countries in shambles and shining today. Why one more example? and that too not clean/very good one? What is the idea behind showing that our biggest competitor has nothing but in a great shape?

  16. S K Kumar Says:

    A garden in a day. George in wonderland.

  17. dhans Says:

    george!!!! in india you are allowed to write thinks like this…

    try doing this in china, praise india or point some wrong things there, then u would know the difference…

    keep going … i like the way you praise them!

  18. dhans Says:

    >> “All factories in the city centre have been closed and inhabitants of three lakh odd houses rehabilitated outside the city. There were no protests as there was in Delhi when the courts ordered closure of some old factories in the inner city.”

    Do you want this here…. first one to go out is your bungalow!!! r u ready to give up?

  19. Bombattu Huduga Says:

    Let’s look at it objectively.

    Both India and China though they used different system’s have created a deep void between Rich and Poor. This is going to spell anarchy. Our crime graph is all time high, because of imbalance in the society.

    License Raj had some control on the aspects of satisfaction and life. However at present Billionaires galore in India and China. The poor are crushed and when they cant bear the pain they go on rampage.

    The law is meant to safeguard the Billionaires or the so called upper class. They throw money or have a parrallel govt through media and money.

    Consumerism and Capitalism has eaten up our basic needs such as good Education(Primary and Secondary) and Primary health care.

    God Save India !!!

  20. srivatsa Says:

    illi channagi barididdare namma bengaluru haalagi irodanna…i feel so nostalgic about the old lost bangalore

  21. Vijaya Says:

    One or two commentators are sticking their neck too much out; they seem to accept corruption is a byproduct of freedom and there is no choice about it. Gentlemen, you guys need freedom because you are english educated with a decent job, home, income, family, etc; what about India’s crores of poor, who have none of these; what value is freedom to them. since they cannot comment in a blog like you do, you get away; freedom everyone loves; but, given a choice, what will those left out of “development” choose: freedom of speech or tummyful of food? I guess it’s latter. So, my view is, freedom we want; so also all-round development and infrastructure. If china is developing something to showcase, let’s not crib about it; replicate it, if we can.

  22. Arvind Amin Says:

    India lacks imagination and vision. Corruption within GOI is killing the spirit of our nation; for Indiands have no pride or loyalty to India.

    Democracy does not rule India, but rapist murderers of GOI rule India. Condition of our poor is just like the poor of Russia and France, which wil open the doors od blood revolution, which will leave behind a destroyed India.

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