President Hu Jintao yesterday celebrated the National Day holiday with
workers at the construction sites of the 2008 Beijing Olympic venues.
Chinese President Hu Jintao
listens to introduction on Beijing Olympic venues construction Centre as
he inspected the construction sites of the National Stadium, the main
venue for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, the National Swimming Centre
(also called "the Water Cube") and other venues yesterday, the National
Day. [Xinhua] |
Hu inspected the construction
sites of the National Stadium, the main venue for the 2008 Beijing Olympic
Games, the National Swimming Centre (also called "the Water Cube") and other
venues yesterday.
Yesterday marked the first day of the week-long National Day holiday, with
millions of people flocking to major tourist sites and colourful celebrations
taking place across the country.
The government is expecting more than 330 million people to travel during the
holidays marking the 57th anniversary of the People's Republic of China, the
People's Daily reported.
Up to 41 million people were expected to travel by rail during the period,
with the railway bureau adding up to 100 trains linking major cities and coastal
areas to meet demand.
Train tickets from Beijing to the coastal cities of Qingdao and Dalian and
the tourist cities of Xi'an and Harbin have been sold out for days, the report
said.
Rail traffic was especially heavy in and out of the booming southern city of
Guangzhou and the bustling eastern metropolis of Shanghai.
Up to 1.16 million passengers were expected to fly in or out of Beijing's
Capital International Airport during the week, Xinhua News Agency said.
In the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), Chief Executive
Donald Tsang hosted a government reception yesterday to mark National Day.
Hong Kong has an increasingly important role to play in the nation's
development, Tsang said.
"To this end, we held the Economic Summit on the 11th Five-Year Plan to map
out strategies for the way forward. We will never forget the strong support the
central government has given us," he told the reception.
Late yesterday, the HKSAR staged a massive fireworks display over Victoria
Harbour to celebrate National Day.
At a reception on Saturday, Premier Wen Jiabao promised to fight against
corruption and push ahead with all-round reforms.
"We are committed to reform and opening up. A socialist society is one that
should make steady progress through reform," said Wen at the event in the Great
Hall of the People.
"We will press ahead with all-round economic, political, cultural and social
reform, boost productive forces, strengthen democracy and the legal system, and
resolutely fight against corruption. (This is) to build a clean and honest
government, ensure social fairness and justice, and improve the socialist
system."
All top Chinese leaders, including President Hu Jintao and top legislator Wu
Bangguo, as well as foreign diplomats, attended the gathering.
China cannot develop itself in isolation from the rest of the world, said
Wen, promising to adhere to the basic state policy of opening up to the outside
world and drawing on achievements of all civilizations.
The programme of reform and opening will propel China's modernization drive,
according to Wen.
"The only road for us is to forge ahead. There will be no going back," said
Wen.
He said that China has embarked on the road of scientific development and
will stay firmly on it.