Special report: Tibet: Its Past and
Present
LHASA, May 8 (Xinhua) -- The Yishion clothing store,
the retail outlet where five female sales staff burned to death in the Lhasa
riot on March 14, reopened on Thursday.
Six flower baskets bearing "Kaiyedaji" cards, which
means "good luck" in Chinese, were placed in front of the store.
Yishion was the worst-hit store in Lhasa, but the
re-decorated modern store almost made people forget the atrocity.
Along with new decorations, the owner installed fire
extinguishers and created an emergency exit.
The five women who died in the riot were only 20
years old on average, and the store was in ruins after the riot.
The 23-year-old Zhoi'ma, the only survivor of the
fire, was busily putting goods on the shelves. Three newly-hired assistants were
also preparing for the re-opening. They did not want to mention the past.
"Peace has come. Facing our new life is more
important," one ofthe women said.
The government provided a concessional loan of 1
million yuan (142,857 U.S. dollars) to the store and reduced its rent and tax,
said store owner Tang Qingyan.
On the same day, the Beijing Olympic torch rose to
the top of Mt. Qomolangma (Everest)
"We did not deliberately choose the same day as the
Olympic torch relay at Mt. Qomolangma. But the coincidence made me happy," Tang
said.
Most of the 1,300 vendors affected in the riot have
reopened, according to the Lhasa Municipal Industrial and Commercial Bureau.
The Tibet regional government has offered a series of
preferential policies connected to taxes, loans, living allowances and
reemployment to help them restore their business. The rent subsidy is as high as
90 percent in the first year.