Special Report: 17th CPC National Congress
BEIJING, Oct. 15 (Xinhua) -- As the 17th National
Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) opens on Monday, foreign and
domestic media have been sparing no effort to cover the country's most important
political event in five years.
Major global news agencies, such as Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse (AFP), have run hundreds of stories about the event over the past few months.
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Foreign journalists report the 17th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China on Oct. 15, 2007. The congress, which opens here at 9 a.m. on Monday, will last seven days till October 21. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Referring to the congress as "a crucial meeting that
will define the nation's political agenda for the next five years", AFP
interpreted the "scientific outlook on development", which is expected to be
incorporated into the Party Constitution, as an attempt to correct many of the
imbalances that have accompanied China's economic development over the past 29
years.
The agency quoted Sidney Rittenberg, an American
scholar who has had ties with China since the 1940s, as saying that "the most
important, and popular, measures that may come out of the Congress for ordinary
citizens will be further steps to close the shocking and still-growing income
gap between town and country, coast and hinterland."
Most foreign media also show great interest in the
agenda of the congress -- to elect the Party's 17th Central Committee that will
decide the CPC's new leadership lineup for the coming few years, and to elect a
new Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.
The Hong Kong-based Metropolis Daily commented that
few party draws such extensive media attention across the world with its
national congress as the CPC does, saying it shows the increasingly prominent
position of China as well as the 73-million-member ruling party.
All China's major newspapers have been stuffing their
frontpages with reports about the CPC congress and some issued feature pages
devoted to the once-every-five-years event.
The People's Daily said in its Monday's frontpage
editorial that the congress signaled a new page of the CPC history, a new voyage
of socialism with Chinese characteristics and a new prospect of the revival of
the Chinese nation.
In its Monday issue, the English newspaper China
Daily quoted Professor Zhou Tianyong from the Party School of the CPC Central
Committee as saying that "building a harmonious society" actually marks a
watershed in the leadership as it now has to balance different interest groups
amid changing social strata after nearly three decades of market-economy
operations.
It was also brought out as a response to the
existence of "acutely inharmonious factors" and social woes in recent years,
marked by a widening wealth gap, corruption, pollution and inadequate government
spending on education and health care, according to Zhou.

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