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BEIJING, March 12 (Xinhuanet) --
China's political advisors have proposed to print the head portraits of Dr. Sun
Yat-sen, forerunner of China's democratic revolution, and Deng Xiaoping, chief
architect of China's reform and opening-up, on the bank notes of the Chinese
currency, the Renminbi (RMB) or yuan.
"Dr. Sun had led the democratic revolution which
toppled the 2,000-year-old feudal imperial system, and was the founding father
of China's republican system," said Hu Zhibin, a member of the 10th National
Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the
country's top advisory body in its annual full session here.
"Dr. Sun has been admired by people across the Taiwan
Straits and Chinese all over the world, and he certainly deserves a place on the
RMB notes," Hu added.
Hu and 11 of his colleagues have submitted a proposal
regarding the issue to the ongoing session.
The proposal coincided with the commemoration of the
81st anniversary of the demise of Dr. Sun (1866-1925), which falls on Sunday.
The anniversary was marked in several places in the Chinese mainland, including
Sun's hometown in Guangdong Province and Beijing and Shanghai, as well as in
Taiwan, where the Chinese Kuomintang (KMT) party founded by Sun is based.
In two other separate proposals submitted to the
CPPCC session, advisors Duan Huijun and Gu Xinyi have called for paying tribute
to late Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping (1904-1997) by putting his head portrait on
the RMB notes.
"We owe our sustained, rapid economic growth and
constantly rising international status over the past decades to Deng
Xiaoping,who initiated the reform and opening-up drive in the late 1970s," wrote
Duan in his proposal.
It is an international practice for a nation to print
the portraits of its outstanding leaders of different historical periods on bank
notes so the proposal shouldn't be viewed as a sort of "personal cult," said Gu.
As the core of China's second generation of
leadership, Deng had repeatedly warned against the danger of personal cult to
the Party and state, saying that the overheated cult for China's late Chairman
Mao Zedong, who founded the People's Republic of China in 1949, was one of the
factors to blame for the ten-year political and social tumult during the
Cultural Revolution (1966-1976).
Most RMB notes in circulation in China today bear the
image of Mao. The country's latest set of RMB notes, the fifth since 1948,
choose Mao's head portrait as the main pattern on the front side of all six
pieces, with the face value of 1, 5, 10, 20, 50 and 100yuan respectively.
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