Special Report:
17th CPC National
Congress
BEIJING, Oct. 15 (Xinhua) -- China's most important political event in five
years was brought to a world audience on Monday as foreign and domestic news
organizations carried reams of copy on wire, Internet, and also live on TV and
on radio.
At 9:00 a.m. when the 17th National Congress of the Communist Party of
China (CPC) kicked off, China Central Television began live broadcasting the
event on Channels 1, 4 and 9 (English) as well as the news, Spanish and French
channels.
In his two-and-half-hour keynote speech, Hu Jintao, general secretary of
the 16th CPC Central Committee, outlined the country's ambitious goals for
economic, political and social developments, as well as the nation's position on
the world stage.
As Hu went on with his speech, major foreign news agencies, such as
Associated Press, Reuters, Agence France-Presse (AFP), as well as China's
official Xinhua News Agency, were running dozens of series of updated stories
that offered digests and interpretations of his speech to readers around the
world.
These news providers focused their attention on several key points in Hu's
speech -- a peace agreement with Taiwan, a quadrupling of China's economy by
2020, a crackdown on corruption, greater energy conservation and environmental
protection, and efforts to spread the economic boom's benefits more fairly
throughout society.
In one of its stories, Reuters drew several analysts' view and offered
immediate commentaries of Hu's speech.
"The speech sends the signal that the government will ensure sustainable
economic prosperity, which is the cornerstone of the stock market's boom," fund
manager Liu Lifeng with BOC international holdings, Shanghai was quoted as
saying.
Shifting the emphasis towards per capita targets reflects the Chinese
leadership's concern for ordinary Chinese citizens, Wang Qing, a Hong Kong-based
economist with Morgan Stanley, was quoted by AFP as saying.
"It highlights the current administration's concern about people's
welfare," Wang said.
China's vast number of Internet surfers was also able to be
kept updated of the event online as almost all of China's leading portals filled
their homepages with reports about Hu's speech Monday morning.