Legions of volunteers lend a hand at Beijing expo
Around 4,000 university students have provided or will provide professional services to visitors on a volunteer basis at the ongoing International Horticultural Exhibition in Beijing’s Yanqing district during their summer break, Beijing Youth Daily reported.
These students from Beijing and Zhangjiakou, North China’s Hebei province, do their work in groups at the Beijing expo, where temperatures can easily exceed 30 C during the summer.
Volunteers have little time to spend under the umbrellas, and keep busy giving directions to visitors under the sun. When it rains, they line up on both sides of the road to lead tourists to the nearest cover.
Zhao Yihan worked as a hostess. She and her partner held a 10-hour post split into two shifts every day. Standing in the scorching sun, volunteers need to make sure their posture and manner of speaking present the image of volunteers in the best possible way.
"The happiest moment for me every day is to give answers to tourists' questions." Zhao said. It makes her feel her hard work is worth it, she added.
For indoor volunteers who work in pavilions, walking 30,000 steps a day is not unheard of. Many have become excellent "tour guides" — they always give visitors recommendations on the best activities and places to go.
Xu Bizeng, a college student from the Beijing Institute of Technology who works at the Uganda Pavilion, has established himself as an outstanding interpreter. After several days of practice, he is able to tell the background stories of each traditional Ugandan handicraft accurately and skillfully.
- Arab League delegation visits China-Arab Research Center on Reform and Development for 10th anniversary
- Shanghai Jiao Tong University launches Center for Studies of Global South Sustainable Development
- Ex-CNNC general manager faces disciplinary probe
- China launches long march 12 rocket, deploys satellites for expanding space network
- Global gathering transforms Yixing village into youth hub
- China's prosecutors intensify crackdown on crime, charge 1.27 million in first 11 months of 2025
































