Yahoo – AFP,
Tom Hancock, 17 Aug 2014
![]() |
Visitors
look at the aquarium inside the Chimelong Ocean Kingdom on
Hengqin Island, in
Zhuhai, China's southern Guangdong province, on April 29, 2014
(AFP Photo/Mark
Ralston)
|
A giant
63-metre blue whale shark statue towers over the world's largest aquarium, on a
Chinese island being promoted as a testing ground for reforms aimed at
encouraging domestic consumption as the driver of economic growth.
Hengqin
island is just across the Pearl River from Shenzhen, the boom town on the
border with Hong Kong that was designated a Special Economic Zone 35 years ago.
At the time
Shenzhen was a fishing village. Now foreign investment and a freer capitalist
economy have turned it into an export powerhouse with a population of more than
10 million and miles of high-rise buildings.
![]() |
Visitors
look at the aquarium inside the
Chimelong Ocean Kingdom on Hengqin
Island, in
Zhuhai, China's southern
Guangdong province, on April 29, 2014
(AFP Photo/Mark
Ralston)
|
Hengqin is
being developed as a test bed for a new kind of reform, said to stretch even to
punching holes through the country's "Great Firewall" of Internet
censorship.
Now largely
fields and scrubland, the island is intended as a hub for education, creative
industries and tourism, with theme parks, hotels and restaurants tapping the
swelling wallets of China's new middle class.
The
aquarium at the $5 billion Chimelong Ocean Kingdom holds a stupendous 49
million litres (about 50,000 tons) of water -- certified as the world's largest
by Guinness World Records when it opened in March -- held back by a
cinema-screen-sized window bathing spectators in blue light.
A rainbow
of sea creatures from tiny yellow croakers, blue sailfish and lumbering sharks
drifted past.
"It's
huge," 11 year-old Wu Junfeng exclaimed, as his mother looked on,
clutching their 300 yuan ($50) tickets. "There's fish and turtles!"
Half-finished blocks
Local
officials offering a raft of tax breaks say they have attracted 250 billion
yuan in investment since the project was launched in 2008.
"We
have even more special policies than the special economic zones" such as
Shenzhen, Hengqin government chief Niu Jing told AFP.
![]() |
Beluga
whales leap from the water during a performance at the Chimelong Ocean
Kingdom
on Hengqin Island, in Zhuhai, China's southern Guangdong province,
on April 29,
2014 (AFP Photo/Mark Ralston)
|
"Hengqin's
position is unique, with clear advantages, being a neighbour of Macau and Hong
Kong," he added.
The British
ex-colony is one of Asia's key financial hubs, while the former Portuguese
enclave, just a few minutes' drive down the coast from Hengqin, is the world's
most lucrative gambling centre.
It attracts
millions of visitors from China's mainland, where casinos are banned, and has
annual receipts seven times higher than Las Vegas.
But Hengqin
has a long way to go.
The island
has fewer than 10,000 permanent residents -- officials say there will be more
than 250,000 by 2020 -- and the wide highway to Chimelong Ocean Kingdom passes
dozens of half-finished apartment blocks.
Facebook,
Twitter
The
promised reforms are also a work in progress.
Analysts
say China's tight censorship system -- most notable in the government's blocks
on foreign websites, known as the "Great Firewall" -- and close
control of universities stifle creativity.
![]() |
A visitor
looks at a stingray inside the Chimelong Ocean Kingdom on Hengqin
Island, in
Zhuhai, China's southern Guangdong province, on April 29, 2014 (AFP
Photo/Mark
Ralston)
|
So Hengqin
officials claim to be relaxing limits on freedom of speech to burnish the
island's credentials as a centre for education and culture.
Residents
will "have unrestricted Internet access, and enjoy social and political
rights as they do in Macau", the government-run China Daily said last
year.
The Global
Times, which is close to the Communist Party, said officials had submitted a
plan to make Hengqin "the first region on the Chinese mainland where local
residents can skirt the firewall and get access to blocked websites including
Twitter, Facebook and YouTube".
But the
prohibitions were still in place when AFP visited and Hengqin's government
refused to comment on the proposal's status.
The
University of Macau is building a campus for 15,000 students on the island, and
says it will come under Macanese jurisdiction -- which has more robust
protections for academic freedom than the mainland.
But under
President Xi Jinping, China has tightened controls on civil society, the media
and Internet in recent months.
The
crackdown has apparently spread to Macau, where a French academic was
reportedly sacked in July after he organised a conference on tens of millions
of deaths caused by a 1950s famine blamed on Mao Zedong and Communist Party
policies.
Island
authorities have also promised reforms to China's Communist-controlled legal
system, where corruption has long unnerved investors.
![]() |
Entrance to
the Chimelong Ocean
Kingdom, on Hengqin Island in Zhuhai,
China's southern Guangdong province,
pictured on April 29, 2014
(AFP Photo/Mark Ralston)
|
Early
housing sales have gone well and prices have risen despite a nationwide
property slowdown, she noted.
But its
target customers gave it mixed reviews.
"We
think it's more fun than Macau," said Sylvia Liang, a 21-year-old
advertising student, as she watched white beluga whales whistle while wetsuited
attendants balanced on their backs in an auditorium at the aquarium complex.
School
student Wu, though, preferred to be among the high-rollers down the coast.
"My
parents usually go to Macau to gamble," he explained. "So they leave
me alone."





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