Foreword I II III IV VVI VII Conclusion
VII. The News and Publishing, Broadcasting, Film and Television Industries Are Developing Rapidly
There was no genuine news and publishing industry in Tibet
before its peaceful liberation, and the materials printed by the few wood-block printing
houses were almost all scriptures. Tibet's news and publishing industry has grown
gradually from nothing since its peaceful liberation. Especially in the past 20 years, the
publishing of books, newspapers and audio-visual materials has made rapid progress, and a
news and publishing system covering the whole region has already taken initial shape.
Publishing is flourishing. Tibet has established four publishing houses and an
audio-visual products duplication and manufacturing plant. The Tibet People's Publishing
House has published over 6,600 titles of books, with a total distribution of over 78.9
million copies since it was founded some 30 years ago, among which Tibetan-language books
accounted for approximately 80 percent, and nearly 100 titles won national or regional
prizes. At present, the region has the Tibet Xinhua Printing House and another 24 printing
houses, and new technologies have been gradually introduced to printing enterprises, such
as electronic composition, offset lithography, electronic color separation and polychrome
printing. There was no system of book distribution in Tibet before its peaceful
liberation. But now, the region has 67 Xinhua bookstores at regional, prefectural (city)
and county levels. A network of book distribution covering the whole region is now
basically in place, offering a total of 90-odd million Tibetan-lan guage books in over
8,000 titles to the masses of Tibetan readers over the past 20 years. The publishing of
newspapers and periodicals has also been developed steadily. The Tibet Daily started
publication in 1956, and Tibetan Literature and Art in 1977. Now, a total of 52 newspapers
and periodicals are published for the general public in Tibet.
Tibet's broadcasting, film and television industries have also been developed gradually
since its peaceful liberation. The Lhasa Cable Broadcasting Station was established in
1953; wireless broadcasting was started in 1958; the Tibet People's Broadcasting Station
was formally founded in 1959; black-and-white and color television programs were
trial-broadcast in 1978 and 1979, respectively; the Tibet Television was established
formally in 1985; and the project of the Production Center of the Tibet Dubbed Radio and
Television Programs was put in use in 1995. In the last four decades and more, the state
and the autonomous region have invested a total of 530 million yuan in Tibet's radio, film
and television industries. The Central Government as well as provinces and municipalities
have also given their support to Tibet by supplying it with a large number of equipment
and materials, more than 200 technicians and cadres in five groups, and training a galaxy
of broadcasting, film and television professionals for it.
At present, Tibet has two radio broadcasting stations, 36 medium- and short-wave radio
transmitting and relay stations, 45 county- level FM relay stations, two wireless
television stations, 354 television relay stations and 1,475 ground satellite stations,
bringing radio and TV programs to 65 and 55 percent of the people in Tibet, respectively,
and TV programs to 75 percent of the residents in Lhasa and its vicinity. Seeing films is
one of the main cultural activities of the broad masses of people in agricultural and
pastoral areas. Tibet now has 436 cinemas, 650 grassroots film projection teams and over
9,300 projection centers, giving more than 130,000 movie shows to 28.5 million people
annually, averaging at least one show per farmer or herdsman per month. Films are dubbed
in Tibetan in agricultural and pastoral areas so that farmers and herdsmen can understand
them. Radio, film and television have become indispensable parts of the cultural lives of
the people of various ethnic groups in Tibet.
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