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| Top leaders Hu Jintao, Wu Bangguo, Wen
Jiabao, Jia Qinglin, Zeng Qinghong, Huang Ju, Wu Guanzheng, Li Changchun
and Luo Gan, and over 4,000 people attend a reception marking the 55th
anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China in Beijing
Sept. 30. Visiting Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk and Queen Norodom
Monineath Sihanouk are also present at the invitation.
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BEIJING, Oct. 1 (Xinhuanet) --
China will continue to push ahead political and economic reforms as well as
enhance democracy and the rule of law, said Premier Wen Jiabao Thursday in
Beijing.
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| Premier Wen Jiabao toasts to celebrate the
55th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China on
October 1, 1949, during a reception at the Great Hall of the People in
Beijing September 30, 2004. [Reuters] |
In a speech to mark Friday's 55th anniversary of the
founding of the People's Republic of China, Wen also said China will "firmly
oppose and contain the separatist forces in Taiwan."
As a country of 1.3 billion people with a relatively
low economic development level, China must always make economic development its
"central task" and try to solve problems through development, said Wen at the
reception in the Great Hall of the People.
President Hu Jintao, top legislator Wu Bangguo and
other top Chinese leaders attended the reception.
Guests also included Chief Executive of Hong Kong
Special Administrative Region (SAR) Tung Chee-hwa, Macao SAR Chief Executive
Edmund Ho Hau Wah and Cambodia's King Sihanouk.
Wen said that "a people-oriented approach must be
followed, and efforts must be made to meet people's many-sided needs and promote
the all-round development of man."
He promised to "open China wider to the outside
world, adapt better to the changing world of economic globalization and
technological revolution, and draw on all the useful achievements of human
civilization."
The premier said that China will further improve its
legal system, go about governance in accordance with law and build a socialist
country based on the rule of law.
In his speech, Wen quoted an old Chinese saying,
"worries and toil can help the rise of a country, whereas ease and complacency
can ruin oneself," to urge officials and people to work hard and live plainly
for a long time to come.
He pledged to take tougher action against corruption.
"We must carry out the fight against corruption in a
more intensive manner and severely punish the guilty parties," he said.
"We must address both the symptoms and the root
causes of corruption, and take a comprehensive approach to prevent the problem
from happening," he added.
Wen said that China will stick to its path of
peaceful development and will "never seek hegemony."
On cross-Straits relations, Wen said that China will
continue to follow the basic policy of "peaceful reunification" with Taiwan, but
"firmly oppose and contain the separatist forces in Taiwan, and unswervingly
safeguard China's sovereignty and territorial integrity."
"The sacred goal of complete national reunification
must be achieved. It shall be achieved in the end," said Wen to long and loud
applause.
"The 55 years of glory have given us an important and
fundamental conclusion: China must follow the path of independently building
socialism with Chinese characteristics under the firm leadership of the Chinese
Communist Party, basing itself on its own national conditions and getting along
with the trends of world development," said Wen.
In another 45 years, China will be marking the
centenary of the People's Republic, according to Wen.
By then, China, a country with one sixth of the
world's population, will have basically achieved modernization and realized the
great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation, he said.
"This will be a major contribution of the Chinese
people to the progress of mankind," he said.
(China Daily) |