Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions 2007
BEIJING, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Andrew Kirillov, Beijing
bureau chief of the Itar-Tass News Agency in Russia, appeared joyous when
registering to cover China's upcoming "two sessions", not only because he was to
witness the important political event again, but he would find it much easier to
locate interviewees.
"In the past, deputies to the National People's
Congress were not easy to contact," recalled Kirillov, who first came to China
in 1988.
The First Session of the 11th National People's
Congress (NPC) and the First Session of the 11th National Committee of the
Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) are slated to open
here on March 5 and March 3 respectively.
Tian Qi, vice director of the press center of the two
sessions who took charge of foreign media application, promised that they would
arrange more interviews for reporters. "A major goal of our work is to have more
interview requests of reporters fulfilled," he said.
As of Friday, the two sessions this year had drawn
843 foreign journalists of 225 media institutions from 42 countries, including
about 50 who came from abroad specially for the political events.
The number of foreign reporters to this year's two
sessions hit a record high with an increase of 20 percent over last year, Tian
said.
China promulgated new regulations at the start of
last year to give overseas reporters more freedom in news reporting.
At the 17th National Congress of the Communist Party
of China, reporters had unprecedented news access: interview requests were
promptly handled, news conferences were held, and some panel discussions were
open to the press.
Observers believed China would attract more overseas
reporters this year with the factors of the two sessions, the Olympic Games and
booming economy.
Kyodo News Agency of China's neighbor Japan sent a
big squad of 16 journalists, but it was outnumbered by Reuters, which dispatched
an unprecedentedly strong team of 50.
Oscar Garschagen, Shanghai bureau chief of the
Netherlands-based newspaper NRC Handelsblad/NRC.Next, came to the annual events
for the first time. He was interested in the government work report to be
delivered by Premier Wen Jiabao at the opening of the NPC session, the
government's plan for the next five years and the development in China's central
and western regions and rural areas.
"I'd like to interview Premier Wen if he has time,"
he said.
Edward C. Lanfranco, Beijing bureau chief of United
Press International, laid his interest on the government's personnel reshuffle,
implementation of the Scientific Outlook on Development and policy adjustment.
He also planned to talk with the three migrant workers who just entered the top
legislative body.
To sate journalistic ambition, the two sessions are
expected tohave most of the NPC and CPPCC panels open to reporters in their
discussions, followed by a newly-added 20-minute group interview for reporters
to raise questions to the top legislators and political advisors.
Another change concerning the media this year is that
overseas and domestic journalists share the same registration hall. "This move
is aimed at encouraging exchanges between reporters," said Zhu Shouchen, another
vice director of the two sessions' press center.
A package including introductions to government
organs, NPC and CPPCC panels, agendas of the sessions, press conferences and
group interviews was handed to reporters upon registration.
More than 20 computers were offered on the second
floor of the press center to reporters, with most of them equipped with English
operation systems.
News photos, signals of radio and TV programs on
important occasions at the two sessions will be provided free of charge together
with broadband and wireless Internet service.
Asked for further advice to the press center,
Kirillov thought for a while and replied smilingly, "I need some bags to carry
books."
On a long table in the reception hall there were
nearly 100 kinds of books in various languages, which cover China's political
and legal systems, culture, society, and shopping and tourism guidance. Some
even touch upon sensitive topics like homosexuality.