BEIHAI , a pleasant town situated on the
Beibu
Gulf some 150km from Nanning on the south coast
of Guangxi, was adopted from neighbouring Guangdong
Province in 1954 so that Guangxi would have a viable
seaport. It got going in the late nineteenth century
when the British signed the
Yantai Trading
Agreement with the Qing court, and grew swiftly
as Europeans set up schools, churches, offices and
banks. A bland four-hour train ride from Nanning or
an overnight ride on the
ferry from Hainan Island
, Beihai's importance as a trading centre for the
southwest is now being realized, and the city is
expanding again.
While the only reason to visit Beihai is in
transit to Hainan, there's no problem filling in
time between connections. The older part of town is
along the seafront and on Zhongshan Lu ,
where mouldering colonial buildings add to the
sleepily tropical atmosphere. It's best in the
morning when the fresh catches arrive, and there's a
fabulous fish market here selling every type
and part of sea life imaginable. Hop on a #2 bus
heading west down Haijiao Lu from the end of
Zhongshan Lu and you end up a couple of kilometres
away at the harbour , packed with scores of
wooden-hulled junks, motorized and sailless, but
otherwise traditionally designed. Most of the
vessels here belong to the community of thirteen
thousand refugee " boat people "
living in the adjacent UN-sponsored village. They
were victims of an attempt by the Vietnamese
authorities to remove ethnic Chinese from their
territory, a major cause of the 1979 war between
China and Vietnam. China's reciprocal group are the Jing
, ethnic Vietnamese who settled islands off Beihai
in the sixteenth century.