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A tourist train departs from Xi'an, northwest China's Shaanxi Province, for Almaty, Kazakhstan, May 29, 2025. /Xinhua
The first China-Central Asia cultural tourism train arrived in Almaty, Kazakhstan's largest city and financial hub, on May 31, two days after it departed from Xi'an Railway Station in northwest China's Shaanxi Province.
Upon the train's arrival in Almaty, a four-day cultural and people-to-people exchange event commenced in the Central Asian city. The event included a diverse array of activities – intangible cultural heritage demonstrations, exhibitions of precious artifacts and promotions of traditional Chinese medicine, among others – creating a platform for close cultural dialogue between the people of China and Central Asia.
The cultural tourism train is scheduled to return from Almaty on June 5, with a one-way trip taking about 57 hours.
Jiang Wei, the Chinese general consul in Almaty, said the train will take on the new mission of cultural and tourism exchanges and inject strong new impetus into the cultural and people-to-people cooperation between China and Kazakhstan.
The special train service is one of the outcomes of the first China-Central Asia Summit held in Xi'an in 2023. The second summit is scheduled to take place later this year in Kazakhstan.
During the first summit, China and the five Central Asian countries reached a series of cooperation agreements in fields ranging from politics and economy to technology and people-to people exchanges.
In the area of cultural cooperation, the parties agreed to deepen regional collaboration by promoting more sister-city partnerships, jointly exploring China-Central Asia tourism routes, and expanding vocational education initiatives. One notable example is the "Luban Workshop" program – named after an ancient Chinese craftsman – which provides vocational skills training tailored to local needs.
Tajik students operate equipment at a training center inside a Luban Workshop in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, April 17, 2023. /VCG
The following outcomes highlight the tangible progress made since the first summit.
In September and October 2024, Luban Workshops in Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan were inaugurated, respectively, marking the third and fourth such vocational training centers China has established in Central Asian countries, following the ones in Tajikistan in 2022 and Kazakhstan in 2023.
On June 27, 2024, the first China Book Center in Central Asia was established in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. China donated over 1,000 types of books covering philosophy, arts, traditional Chinese medicine and children's literature in a bid to enhance overseas readers' understanding of contemporary China through these publications.
Starting June 1, 2025, China and Uzbekistan officially implemented a mutual visa-exemption policy, a measure that has greatly facilitated people-to-people exchanges between the two countries.
Besides, the Year of Chinese Culture in Turkmenistan and the Year of Turkmen Culture in China, held respectively in 2023 and 2024, serve as a prime example of bilateral cultural cooperation. Through diverse activities like exhibitions and dance performances, the two countries comprehensively showcased their unique artistic and cultural charms, fostering profound cultural integration.
Locals try out Chinese calligraphy at a park in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, May 27, 2023. /Xinhua
This upsurge in mutual exchanges between China and Central Asian countries is not new, however. For example, as early as 2014, a joint application by China, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan led to the recognition of "the Silk Roads: the Routes Network of Chang'an-Tianshan Corridor" as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. This transnational heritage site comprises 22 locations in China, eight in Kazakhstan and three in Kyrgyzstan.
At present, China and the five Central Asian countries have established approximately 70 pairs of sister provinces, cities and states, according to China's Foreign Ministry.
There are at least 13 Confucius Institutes in Central Asia at present, with 24 Confucius classrooms under them, where the number of students exceeds 18,000, according to the ministry.
Besides, facilitation of civil exchanges has steadily improved. Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan have granted Chinese tourists 14-day and 10-day visa-free stays, respectively.
According to Kazakhstan's Border Service, Chinese tourist arrivals surpassed 650,000 in 2024, a ninefold increase compared to 2019. Hotels in Kazakhstan alone hosted 173,987 Chinese visitors in 2024, marking a 66 percent year-on-year growth. The bilateral tourism will see a promising growth as Kazakhstan is hosting the "Year of Chinese Tourism" in 2025.
As CGTN reporters visited Tajikistan ahead of the second China-Central Asia Summit, a local resident expressed gratitude for China's renovation of local highways and shared a simple yet heartfelt hope: "I want to visit China. I hope to travel there via this highway one day."