Xinhua picks top 10 news stories in China in 2005 (Xinhua) Updated: 2005-12-31 08:51
China's Xinhua News Agency has selected the top 10 news stories in China in
2005. In order of occurrence, the list goes as follows:
-- The Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee initiated a
1.5-year-long campaign in January to carry out in three batches a massive
political and ideological education drive among more than 68 million CPC members
to maintain their moral andsocialist ethical superiority, a new, great project
to promote Party construction and help materialize the goal of building up a
relatively affluent society in an all-round way.
-- Hu Jintao, general secretary of the CPC Central Committee and the Chinese
president, set forth a four-point guideline on relations across the Taiwan
Straits on March 4 that China would unswervingly adhere to the one-China
principle, exert its utmost to seek peaceful reunification and rely on the
Taiwanese people but never waver in its fight against the independence movement
on Taiwan.
The Kuomintang Party, People First Party and New Party from Taiwan sent
delegations to the Chinese mainland from April to July. During the talks between
Hu Jintao and Lien Chan, James Soong and Yok Yu-ming, chairmen of the three
parties, they exchanged views on promoting cross-Straits relations and reached
broad consensus.
Lien Chan's visit in April represents the first trip made by a KMT chairman
to the mainland since 1949 when the Chinese mainland and Taiwan split after a
civil war.
-- China marked the 60th anniversary of the Chinese People's War of
Resistance against Japanese Aggression and concurrently the World War against
Fascism on Sept. 3 with reassurance from President Hu Jintao that China is
committed to peace as it strives to build up a relatively affluent society and
achieve national rejuvenation.
-- The 16th CPC Central Committee deliberated and approved at its Fifth
Plenary Session proposals for formulating the 11th Five-Year Program (2006-2010)
for the National Economy and Social Development on October 11, a blueprint for
nation's economic and social development in the next five years.
-- The world's highest and longest railway, the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, which
stretches from Xining in northwest Qinghai Province to Lhasa, capital of Tibet
on the roof of the world, with a total length of 1,956 kilometers, was completed
in mid October.
-- The flight of Shenzhou-6 spacecraft, with two astronauts on board,
successfully completed its five-day space journey between Oct. 12 and Oct. 17,
two years after Shenzhou-5 that sent China's first astronaut into space.
-- Northeast China's Songhua River was contaminated with benzene and
nitrobezene spilt in an explosion at a local chemical plant under the China
National Petroleum Corporation in Jilin Province on Nov. 13, subsequently
causing a four-day water cutoff in the city of Harbin downstream, which led to
the resignation of Xie Zhenghua, director of the State Environmental Protection
Administration.
-- China's State Food and Drug Administration on Nov. 22 gave the go-ahead
for a Chinese-developed avian flu vaccine for human use to undergo clinical
trials, which marked the major progress China had made in pandemic vaccine
research and development.
The Ministry of Health announced the first two human cases of bird flu in
central Hunan Province and eastern Anhui Province on the Chinese mainland on
Nov. 16. And four more avian H5N1 cases were spotted in Anhui, Guangxi, Liaoning
and Jiangxi respectively later and the Chinese government is working to curb the
spread of the highly pathogenic virus.
-- China revised on Dec. 6 its GDP (gross domestic product) figure for 2004
to 15.99 trillion yuan (about 2 trillion U.S. dollars), up 2.3 trillion yuan
(about 288 billion US dollars), or 16.8 percent from the preliminary figure,
signaling that the country has become the world's sixth largest economy.
The statistics came from a national economic survey to increase the
understanding of the structure of China's secondary and tertiary economic
sectors so as to better guide future economic development.
-- China will stop levying agricultural tax as of Jan. 1, 2006, according to
a decision of the national legislature which approved a motion on abolishing the
regulations on the tax on December 29.
China's top legislature also made a decision on Oct. 27 to revise the
personal income tax law to raise the cutoff point of the monthly personal income
tax from 800 yuan to 1,600 yuan. The revised law goes into effect as of Jan. 1,
2006
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