• 2114阅读
  • 6回复

人民网

级别: 管理员
Newsletter
Weather
Community


English home Forum Photo Gallery Features Newsletter Archive   About US Help Site Map languages Chinese Japanese French Spanish Russian Arabic


China
World
Opinion
Business
Sci-Edu
Culture/Life
Sports
Photos
Services

- Newsletter
- Online Community
- China Biz Info
- News Archive
- Feedback
- Voices of Readers
- Weather Forecast

RSS Feeds

- China
- Business
- World
- Sci-Edu
- Culture/Life
- Sports
- Photos
- Most Popular
- FM Briefings

Search

 
About China

- China at a glance
- China in brief 2004
- Chinese history
- Constitution
- Laws & regulations
- CPC & state organs
- Ethnic minorities
- Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping

Alibaba Directory
Alibaba China
China Suppliers


Home >> China


Chinese President Hu Jintao (R) shakes hands with a participant during the New Year tea party hosted by the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference in Beijing, on Jan. 1, 2006.


UPDATED 17:11, January 02, 2006
Chinese president calls for a good start for 11th Five-Year period
The year 2006 marks the start of China's 11th five-year period (2006-2010) for economic and social development and this year's work is vital to China's developmenty.
China to speed up audit to curb waste of resources: top auditor
China will speed up cost-effectiveness audit to rein in the waste of resources though achievements have been scored in budget audit over the past few years.



China makes public "blacklist" of bribers (16:43, January 02, 2006)
West China sees increasing public health emergencies: official (16:44, January 02, 2006)
China to speed up audit to curb waste of resources: top auditor (10:33, January 02, 2006)
Government website draws attention on its formal operation (09:29, January 02, 2006)
Chinese president calls for a good start for 11th Five-Year period (21:07, January 01, 2006)
President Hu calls for joint efforts of all Chinese for peaceful reunification (16:39, January 01, 2006)
New laws, regulations go into effect on New Year's day (16:38, January 01, 2006)
2005 sees stable development of Sino-US relations: Chinese ambassador (13:34, January 01, 2006)
Cambodian King leaves for Beijing to see his father (12:21, January 01, 2006)
Chinese, Indian leaders exchange congratulations on launching of Friendship Year (12:20, January 01, 2006)
Party leaders join Beijing audience at New Year Concert as Sarah Brightman shines (10:46, January 01, 2006)
Chinese government turns "face to face" online with general public (10:07, January 01, 2006)
Backgrounder: Chinese central government website (10:06, January 01, 2006)
China's central government website opens formally on New Year's Day (10:07, January 01, 2006)
Chinese, Russian leaders exchange new year's greetings (10:05, January 01, 2006)
Thailand to open consulate general in S. China autonomous region (10:00, January 01, 2006)
Chinese president stresses commitment to peaceful development (11:43, January 01, 2006)
Premier visits people in earthquake-hit area in E China before New Year (11:43, January 01, 2006)
Chinese president vows adherence to one China principle on Taiwan issue (10:02, January 01, 2006)
Chinese president promises long-term prosperity, stability of Hong Kong, Macao (10:02, January 01, 2006)
China aims for fast, sound development in 2006: Chinese President (10:03, January 01, 2006)
Chinese, ROK foreign ministers talk by telephone (09:59, January 01, 2006)
China grants 3.72 million dollars in aid to Niger (13:47, December 31)
China's central government Website to open formally on New Year's Day (13:41, December 31)
Standards to highlight firms' social obligations (09:38, December 31)
Mystery surrounds source of seventh human infection (09:37, December 31)
Epidemic monitoring to be enhanced (09:35, December 31)
At least 10 killed in 3 mining accidents (09:01, December 31)
Foot-and-mouth outbreak confirmed in E. China province (10:47, December 31)
CPC general secretary calls for sound style in Party-building theory study (07:48, December 31)
Chinese bid farewell to mainland's chief negotiator with Taiwan (07:47, December 31)
China launches association to promote outbound religious exchanges (07:49, December 31)
China strongly indignant at Japanese smearing of its image (07:50, December 31)
Top Chinese leaders join Beijing audience to watch New Year Beijing Opera show (07:51, December 31)
China will peacefully develop: FM (07:51, December 31)
China's electric power installed capability tops 500 million kw (15:34, December 30)
E. China province to publicize bribery records (15:04, December 30)
China adds grants for Nepal's polytechnic institute construction (15:04, December 30)
ARATS thanks SEF for condolences over Wang Daohan's death on behalf of family (15:03, December 30)
Chinese mainland youth delegation wraps up Macao tour (12:22, December 30)
ARATS thanks friendly personages for condolences over death of Wang Daohan (12:21, December 30)
China pledges to boost rural development (10:27, December 30)
Wang remembered for enhancing cross-Straits ties (08:06, December 30)
Taiwan celebrities mourn top negotiator (08:51, December 30)
Rural areas "must be strengthened" (08:55, December 30)



  Recommendation
- Text Version
- RSS Feeds
- China Forum
- Newsletter
- People's Comment
- Most Popular
  Features
China's Peaceful Development
After 26 years of reform and opening-up, China has blazed a path of development suited to its own conditions.
40th anniversary of the founding of Tibet Autonomous Region
The founding of TAR on Sept 9, 1965 signifies realization of ethnic regional autonomous rights of the Tibetan people.
Sino-Japanese Relations
The China-Japan relations must be handled in the spirit of "taking history as a mirror and looking toward future".
China's National Defense in 2004
China published a white paper on national defense on Dec. 27, the fifth of its kind since 1995.
Central Economic Conference 2004
The conference, held from Dec. 3 to 5, has clarified requirements and an overall arrangement for China's economic work in 2005.
4th Plenum of 16th CPC Central Committee
The Fourth Plenum of the 16th CPC Central Committee was concluded Sept. 19 in Beijing.
People's war against pornography
China has launched a long-term campaign agaisnt pornography in a bid to create a clean moral environment.
100th Anniversary of Deng Xiaoping's Birth
Deng Xiaoping, architect of China's reform and opening-up




Copyright by People's Daily Online, all rights reserved
级别: 管理员
只看该作者 1 发表于: 2006-01-03
今日头条新闻
Chinese president calls for a good start for 11th Five-Year period
     


The year 2006 marks the start of China's 11th five-year period (2006-2010) for economic and social development and this year's work is vital to China's development, Chinese President Hu Jintao said in Beijing Sunday.

Hu said at the New Year tea party hosted by the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference that China will continue to take the "scientific concept of development" as the guideline for overall economic and social development and make a good start for China's 11th five-year (2006-2010) program for economic and social development.

China will attach more importance to the expansion of domestic demand, advance rural development, strengthen independent innovation capability and improve its economic structure in a bid to build an energy-efficient and environment-friendly society, Hu stressed.

China will expand socialist democracy, improve its legal system, promote ideological and ethical progress and deepen the reform of the cultural sector, Hu said.

China will continue promoting social harmony, work hard to address problems closely related to people's life, increase employment, enhance the social security system, improve health service, strengthen workplace safety, upgrade social management and maintain social stability in the new year, he said.

Hu noted enhancing the Chinese Communist Party's governing capability is key to economic and social development.

http://english.people.com.cn/200601/01/eng20060101_232250.html
级别: 管理员
只看该作者 2 发表于: 2006-01-03
China to speed up audit to curb waste of resources: top auditor
     


China will speed up cost-effectiveness audit to rein in the waste of resources though achievements have been scored in budget audit over the past few years, Li Jinhua, the top auditor of the country, has said.

"In this regard, auditors will evaluate the consumption of resources and results of projects and put forward suggestions and proposals for the government to deal with problems found during the auditing," said Li, auditor general of the National Audit Office, during a recent interview with Xinhua.

After auditing 40 departments of the central government, auditors concluded that the number of cases involving irregularities was on the decrease while budget management was improving, according to Li.

However, although quite a few projects were built legally, they could not produce sound economic returns and social benefit as expected, and had even resulted in a waste of resources, capital and manpower, which could hardly be found during financial audit, he said.

"Economic losses caused by waste is really a problem as serious as embezzlement and corruption," said Li, who admitted government departments had improved the use of budget funds under increasingly strict auditing over the past years.

"How to save resources and achieve the best possible results at the cost of the least possible resources is an important task before us."

Li said his office will intensify efforts to audit the cost-effectiveness of projects in the future and try to place equal importance to both budget audit and cost-effectiveness audit at the end of 2007.

However, what auditors can do is to investigate and make suggestions, and "it's up to policy-makers to decide whether the suggestions or proposals are feasible," said Li.

On the whole, the purpose of cost-effectiveness audit is to help improve management and increase benefit, and Li believes they will win understanding and support from those being audited.

Li is praised by many as "national hero" as he led his colleagues in finding problems during the auditing of some major projects such as the Three Gorges Project, natural forest protection project, the budget of the Beijing Organizing Committee for the 2008 Olympic Games and public reserve fund for housing.

Observers say to intensify auditing to prevent waste of resources is important as China needs to use its limited resources wisely to back up its fast growing growth on the road to build a harmonious society.
级别: 管理员
只看该作者 3 发表于: 2006-01-03
Iran obtains key technology to separate uranium with mixer-settler
     


Iran has developed a key technology to separate uranium from its ore, marking a significant step closer to the country's ambition to construct and run nuclear fuel cycle independently, the state television reported on Sunday.

The report quoted a concerned technician as saying that the new technological breakthrough would allow the Islamic Republic to separate uranium from the ore with the so-called "mixer-settler."

"With the technology, we can use the mixer-settler to produce zirconium and uranium used for the fuel cycle more effectively, and we could not afford to buy the know-how before," the technician said.

"It also minimizes the use of solvent in the process and has a recycling mechanism," he added.

In a mixer settler, two types of liquids of different density are mixed to make certain chemical compounds pass from one liquid into another, and the two liquids then settle due to their different gravities, which will make it easier to separate the compounds.

Uranium is the material used for producing concentrated uranium oxide, nicknamed yellowcake. Yellowcake can be converted into Uranium hexafluoride (UF6), the material for uranium enrichment.

Enriched uranium can be used for both generating electricity and building nuclear weapons.

The United States accuses Iran of developing nuclear weapons under the disguise of civil use, a charge rejected by Tehran as politically motivated.

Iran is under pressure of the European Union, which has recently allowed Iran to conduct uranium enrichment work in Russia, a proposal by Moscow to defuse the Iranian nuclear crisis.

Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani said on Thursday that such a proposal was considerable.
级别: 管理员
只看该作者 4 发表于: 2006-01-03
China's good-neighborly diplomacy sees great fruits
     


The year 2005 is one when China's good-neighborly diplomacy produces great achievements.

At the diplomatic level, China and most of its neighboring countries exchange frequent senior-level visits. President Hu Jintao paid visits respectively to countries including Russia, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Republic of Korea and Vietnam. Premier Wen Jiabao visited India and some Southeast Asian countries while many state leaders in neighboring countries also paid visits to China.

At the trade and economic level, China's trade with neighboring countries exceeded $400 billion from January to October. China has become Japan and the ROK's largest trade partner and the second largest of the ASEAN. The China-Russia trade has topped $20 billion a year while the China-India trade is rapidly climbing toward $20 billion a year. The completion and opening of the China-Kazakhstan pipelines means the shaping up of a new situation of energy cooperation between China and Central Asia.

At the security level, China and neighboring countries such as Russia held joint military exercises leading to enhanced security mutual trust. In meeting non-traditional security challenges like the bird flu, tsunami in the Indian Ocean and earthquake in South Asia, China and its neighbors also launched unprecedented all-round cooperation. Moreover, in multilateral diplomatic areas involving neighboring countries such as the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Summit, East Asia Summit and the six-party talks, the guidelines of China's good-neighborly diplomacy were also fully demonstrated and gained broad acclaims from the international community.

China's good-neighborly diplomacy upholds three principles. Firstly, it includes all neighboring countries far and near, even those once cherishing old grudge, on the basis of burying the hatchet and inaugurating the future. The rapid development of the China-India relations is an embodiment of this principle.

Secondly, it seeks all-round development and mutual promotion of political, economic, cultural and security relations. In this regard the comprehensive advance of the China-ASEAN relations is exemplary.

Thirdly, it is based on the five principles of mutual respect for territorial integrity and sovereignty, mutual non-aggression, non-interference in each other's internal affairs, equality and mutual benefit and peaceful coexistence, seeking mutual benefit and win-win result. As a matter of fact, the Five Principles of Peaceful Co-Existence were the diplomatic principles jointly put forward by China and neighboring countries such as India, Burma when New China was dealing with relationships with neighbors.

China's good-neighborly diplomatic thought inherits directly from the ancient Chinese concepts of peace like "peace being the best option", "harmonizing all states". It is also a consistent principle of the foreign policies of New China. After the end of the Cold War, as China's reform and opening up deepens and China's development keeps speeding up, to seek peace, development, cooperation and all-win result has become the consensus of many neighboring countries. China's diplomatic thoughts have completely new room for development. These are the basic background and sound foundation for China's good-neighborly diplomacy to achieve great results in 2005.

Diplomacy as an international behavior has always been two-way. That China's good-neighborly diplomacy can make plentiful and substantial achievements is also an inevitable result of the well-meaning interaction between China and neighboring countries. China actively implements good-neighborly diplomacy, helping neighbors regard China's "rise" no longer as a strategic threat. On the contrary most of them have established the new notion that China's rise is a strategic opportunity and responded positively to China's good-neighborly diplomacy, seeking to ride the "express" of China's rise, which in turn helped form the mainstream consensus of cooperation and all-win result in Asia-Pacific international relations. This has been further demonstrated at the East Asia Summit held at the yearend.

China cannot develop without the neighboring countries and their prosperity also needs a continually developing China. The two have formed a community which shares a common fate. China's development and that of neighbors boost each other, will jointly raise the status of Asia and make Asia the new political and economic center of the world. For China and its neighboring countries, this is a kind of mission and honor of participating in the "genesis". China will continue to stick to the diplomatic guideline of "building good-neighborly relationships and partnerships", sharing weal and woe. Together we create the new glory of Asia's rise.

The article written by Lin Limin, director of the Strategies Research Center of the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations, and carried on the front page of People's Daily Overseas Edition, Dec.27, is translated by People's Daily Online
级别: 管理员
只看该作者 5 发表于: 2006-01-03
A Brief Chronology of Chinese History



Xia Dynasty 2070-1600 B.C.
Shang Dynasty 1600-1046 B.C.
Zhou Dynasty Western Zhou 1046-771 B.C.
Eastern Zhou
  Spring and Autumn Period
  Warring States Period 770-256 B.C.
770-476 B.C.
475-221 B.C.
Qin Dynasty 221-206 B.C.
Han Dynasty Western Han 206 B.C.-A.D. 25
Eastern Han 25-220
Three Kingdoms Wei 220-265
Shu Han 221-263
Wu 222-280
Western Jin Dynasty 265-317
Eastern Jin Dynasty 317-420
Northern and Southern Dynasties Southern Dynasties Song 420-479
Qi 479-502
Liang 502-557
Chen 557-589
Northern Dynasties Northern Wei 386-534
Eastern Wei 534-550
Northern Qi 550-577
Western Wei 535-556
Northern Zhou 557-581
Sui Dynasty 581-618
Tang Dynasty 618-907
Five Dynasties Later Liang 907-923
Later Tang 923-936
Later Jin 936-947
Later Han 947-950
Later Zhou 951-960
Song Dynasty Northern Song 960-1127
Southern Song 1127-1279
Liao Dynasty 907-1125
Jin Dynasty 1115-1234
Yuan Dynasty 1206-1368
Ming Dynasty 1368-1644
Qing Dynasty 1616-1911
Republic of China 1912-1949
People's Republic of China Founded on October 1, 1949
级别: 管理员
只看该作者 6 发表于: 2006-01-03
中国地图:http://english.people.com.cn/china/19990923A101.html
Geography
  China is situated in eastern Asia, bounded by the Pacific in the east. The third largest country in the world, next to Canada and Russia, it has an area of 9.6 million square kilometers, or one-fifteenth of the world's land mass. It begins from the confluence of the Heilong and Wusuli rivers (135 degrees and 5 minutes east longitude) in the east to the Pamirs west of Wuqia County in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region (73 degrees and 40 minutes east longitude) in the west, about 5,200 kilometers apart; and from the midstream of the Heilong River north of Mohe (53 degrees and 31 minutes north latitude) in the north to the southernmost island Zengmu'ansha in the South China Sea (4 degrees and 15 minutes north latitude), about 5,500 kilometers apart.

  The border stretches over 22,000 kilometers on land and the coastline extends well over 18,000 kilometers, washed by the waters of the Bohai, the Huanghai, the East China and the South China seas. The Bohai Sea is the inland sea of China.

  There are 6,536 islands larger than 500 square meters, the largest is Taiwan, with a total area of about 36,000 square kilometers, and the second, Hainan. The South China Sea Islands are the southernmost island group of China.


Climate
  China lies mainly in the northern temperate zone under the influence of monsoon. From September and October to March and April next year monsoon blow from Siberia and the Mongolia Plateau into China and decrease in force as it goes southward, causing dry and cold winter in the country and a temperature difference of 40 degree centigrade between the north and south. The temperature in China in the winter is 5 to 18 degree centigrade lower than that in other countries on the same latitude in winter. Monsoon blows into China from the ocean in summer, bringing with them warm and wet currents, thus rain.

Great differences in climate are found from region to region owing to China's extensive territory and complex topography. The northern part of Heilongjiang Province in northeast China has no summer, Hainan Island has a long summer but no winter; the Huaihe River valley features four distinct seasons; the western part of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau is covered by snow all year round; the southern part of the Yunan-Guizhou Plateau is spring-like all the year; and the northwestern inland region sees a great drop of temperature in the day. Annual precipitation also varies greatly from region to region; it is as high as 1,500 millimeters along the southeastern coast. Decreasing landward, it is less than 50 millimeters in northwest China. Please click here for current weather report, weather forecast for major Chinese cities and weather analysis.


Administrative Divisions
  China is administratively divided into 23 provinces, 5 autonomous regions, 4 centrally administrative municipalities and 2 special administrative regions. Municipalities are directly under the administration of central government. A municipality has the same political, economical and jurisdictional rights as a province. The statistics of areas are from official information issued in mid 1997 (CHINA 1997, Published by New Star Publishers.).

  Anhui Province  
  Area: 139,000 square kilometers
  Population: 60.70 millions
  Capital: Hefei
  Major Cities: Huangshan; Bengbu; Tongling; Ma'anshan

  Beijing
  Area: 16,800 square kilometers
  Population: 12.59 millions


  Chongqing (Municipality) (Newly Promoted as Municipality in 1997)
  Area: 82,000 square kilometers
  Population: 30.02 millions

  Fujian Province
  Area: 120,000 square kilometers
  Population: 32.61 millions
  Capital: Fuzhou
  Major Cities: Xiamen; Zhangzhou

  Gansu Province
  Area: 450,000 square kilometers
  Population: 24.67 millions
  Capital: Lanzhou
  Major Cities: Dunhuang; Jiayuguan; Jiayuguan

  Guangdong Province
  Area: 186,000 square kilometers
  Population: 69.61 millions
  Capital: Guangzhou
  Major Cities: Chaozhou; Dongguan; Shantou; Shenzhen; Shunde; Zhuhai;

  Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region
  Area: 236,300 square kilometers
  Population: 45.89 millions
  Capital: Nanning
  Major Cities: Beihai; Guilin; Liuzhou

  Guizhou Province
  Area: 170,000 square kilometers
  Population: 35.55 millions
  Capital: Guiyang
  Major Cities: Anshun; Zunyi

  Hainan Province
  Area: 34,000 square kilometers
  Population: 7.34 millions
  Capital: Haikou
  Major Cities: Sanya

  Hebei Province
  Area: 190,000 square kilometers
  Population: 64.84 millions
  Capital: Shijiazhuang
  Major Cities: Cangzhou; Chengde; Qinhuangdao(Including Beidaihe and Shanhaiguan); Tangshan; Baoding; Zhangjiakou

  Heilongjiang Province
  Area: 469,000 square kilometers
  Population: 37.28 millions
  Capital: Harbin
  Major Cities: Hailaer; Mohe; Mudanjiang; Qiqihar; Suifenhe

  Henan Province
  Area: 167,000 square kilometers
  Population: 91.72 millions
  Capital: Zhengzhou
  Major Cities: Anyang; Kaifeng; Luoyang; Sanmenxia

  Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR)
  Area: 1,092 square kilometers
  Population: 6.31 millions

  Hubei Province
  Area: 187,400 square kilometers
  Population: 58.25 millions
  Capital: Wuhan
  Major Cities: Huangshi; Shiyan; Shashi; Xiangfan; Yichang;

  Hunan Province
  Area: 210,000 square kilometers
  Population: 64.28 millions
  Capital: Changsha
  Major Cities: Changde; Dayong; Hengyang; Xiangtan; Zhangjiajie

  Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region
  Area: 1,183,000 square kilometers
  Population: 23.07 millions
  Capital: Hohhot
  Major Cities: Baotou; Chifeng; Wuhai

  Jiangsu Province
  Area: 102,600 square kilometers
  Population: 71.10 millions
  Capital: Nanjing
  Major Cities: Lianyungang; Xuzhou; Suzhou; Wuxi; Zhenjiang

  Jiangxi Province
  Area: 166,600 square kilometers
  Population: 41.05 millions
  Capital: Nanchang
  Major Cities: Jiujiang; Lushan; Jian, Jinggangshan

  Jilin Province
  Area: 187,000 square kilometers
  Population: 26.10 millions
  Capital: Changchun
  Major Cities: Jilin; Tuman; Yanji

  Liaoning Province
  Area: 145,700 square kilometers
  Population: 41.16 millions
  Capital: Shenyang
  Major Cities: Dalian; Dandong; Anshan, Wafangdian

  Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region  
  Area: 66,400 square kilometers
  Population: 5.21 millions
  Capital: Yinchuan
  Major Cities: Shizuishan

  Qinghai Province
  Area: 720,000 square kilometers
  Population: 4.88 millions
  Capital: Xining

  Shaanxi Province
  Area: 205,000 square kilometers
  Population: 35.43 millions
  Capital: Xi'an
  Major Cities: Xianyang; Baoji; Hanzhong;

  Shandong Province
  Area: 153,000 square kilometers
  Population: 87.38 millions
  Capital: Jinan
  Major Cities: Dezhou; Linyi; Qingdao;Qufu; Tai'an; Yantai

  Shanghai (Municipality)
  Area: 6,200 square kilometers
  Population: 14.19 millions
 

  Shanxi Province
  Area: 156,000 square kilometers
  Population: 31.09 millions
  Capital: Taiyuan
  Major Cities: Datong; Linfen; Yangquan

  Sichuan Province
  Area: 488,000 square kilometers
  Population: 84.28 millions
  Capital: Chengdu
  Major Cities: Emeishan; Zigong; Daxianshi

  Taiwan Province
  Area: 36,000 square kilometers
  Population: 21.30 millions
  Major Cities: Taipei; Gaoxiong; Tainan; Xinzhu

  Tianjin (Municipality)
  Area: 11,300 square kilometers
  Population: 9.48 millions

  Tibet Autonomous Region
  Area: 1,220,000 square kilometers
  Population: 2.44 millions
  Capital: Lhasa
  Major Cities: Xigaze

  Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
  Area: 1,600,000 square kilometers
  Population: 16.89 millions
  Capital: Urumqi
  Major Cities: Kashgar; Turfan

  Yunnan Province
  Area: 394,000 square kilometers
  Population: 40.42 millions
  Capital: Kunming
  Major Cities: Dali; Simao; Xishuangbanna

  Macao Special Administrative Region (MSAR)
  Area: 23.8 square kilometers
  Population: 435,000

  Zhejiang Province
  Area: 101,800 square kilometers
  Population: 43.43 millions
  Capital: Hangzhou
  Major Cities: Jiaxing; Ningbo; Shaoxing; Wenzhou;


Ethnic Groups
  There are 56 ethnic groups in China. The Han people form the largest, numbering 1.1 billion and making up 93.3 percent of the country's population. The other ethnic groups, that is the minority nationalities, total 160 million, only 6.7 percent of the Chinese nation.

  Of the minority nationalities, 15 have over a million people each; 13 over 100,000 each; 7 over 50,000 each; and 20 have fewer than 50,000 people each.

  The Han people live all over the country but their compact communities are in the Huanghe, Changjiang and Zhujiang valleys and the Songhua-Liaohe Plain of the northeast. The minority nationalities inhabit 60 percent of the country's total area, and they live mainly in the border regions.

  All nationalities in China are equal, as stipulated by the Constitution of the People's Republic of China, They take part in the administration of state affairs as equals, irrespective of their numbers or the size of areas they inhabit. Every minority nationality is represented in the National People's Congress, which is the highest organ of state power of the People's Republic of China.

  National regional autonomy is practiced in areas where the minority nationalities live in compact communities. There are 5 national autonomous and 75 autonomous counties (or banners in Inner Mongolia). Local autonomous governments are established and local affairs are administered by the minorities themselves. All national autonomous regions are inalienable parts of the People's Republic of China.

  At present, because of various historical factors the minority nationality areas are less developed than Han areas economically and culturally. Over the last three decades, the Chinese Government has adopted many policies and measures, including the provision of manpower, financial and technical support, to help develop these minority nationality areas. Such help, of course, is a two-way street, for minority nationality areas have also contributed to the economic development of the areas inhabited by the Han people.

Population      
Year Total Population Urban Population Rural Population

1995 1.21121 billion

1996 1.22389 billion 359.5 million 864.39 million

1997 1.23626 billion 369.89 million 866.37 million

1998 1.24810 billion
 

Year Birth Rate Death Rate Natural Growth Rate Unit: per thousand

1995 17.12 6.57

1996 16.98 6.56 10.42

1997 16.57 6.51 10.06

1998 16.30 6.50 9.53

The year of 1998 saw19.91 million births, 8.07 million deaths of the population, with a net growth polulation of 11.84 million (compared with 12.37 million in 1997).

  China population is distributed unevenly with more in the east (more than 300 persons per square kilometer) and fewer in the west (about 40 persons per square kilometer. The national average density of population is 119 per square kilometer (1990 census). For basic urban population data, please visit "ChinaToday.com" Provinces and Cities page. The average size of household was 3.7 persons. The proportion of population aged at 0-14 was 26.4 percent, those aged 15-64 was 67.2 percent, and that of the people aged 65 and over was 6.4 percent. The Average Chinese Life-Span of the population was 70.8 years, that for male was 68.71, and female, 73.04.

(Some of the above data are based on the report from China National Statistics Bureau, FOR YOUR REFERENCE ONLY).

Religions
  China is a multi-religious country. Buddhism, Taoism, Islam, Catholicism and Protestantism, with the first three being more wide spread.Various religions exert different influence on different ethnic groups.

Islam is followed by the Hui, Uygur, Kazak, Kirgiz, Tatar, Dongxiang, Salar and Bonan nationalities;

Buddhism and Lamaism are followed by the Tibetan, Mongolian, Dai and Yugur nationalities;

Christianity is followed by the Miao, Yao and Yi nationalities;

Shamanism is followed by the Oroqen, Ewenki and Daur nationalities;

the majority Han nationality believes in Buddhism, Christianity and Taoism.

Culture
  New China has witnessed in the past 50 years a tortuous development of its literature and art. The first Congress of Literary and Art workers held in 1949 set into motion what was known as "socialist art cause". In 1956, the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party put forward the principle of "let one hundred flowers bloom and one hundred schools of though contend", a policy that promoted the development of arts. Things were in good shape up to 1966, when the "cultural revolution" broke out, with the exception of the excessive Anti-Rightist Movement of the late 1950's, which implicated a big number of writers and artists. During the 10-year "cultural revolution", many excellent works were labeled as "poisonous weeds", and writers and artists were persecuted, leaving China's garden of literature and art barren.

  Since 1978, China has seen a revival of artistic creation. Great progress has been made in the following areas:

  1. The country's art performance troupes have been revamped as part of the effort to reshape China's cultural establishment.

  This effort has achieved major breakthroughs over the last 20 years of reform and opening up. Since 1992, the Ministry of Culture, the country's chief regulator of cultural affairs, has responded to the Party's call to deepen structural reforms of cultural institutions by focusing first on performance groups directly under the central government. Measures taken include redefining the relationship between the State and the troupes by introducing performance-related subsidies, and redefining the relationship between the performance groups and performers by linking employment with performance. Thanks to the effective reforms, the number of performance groups directly under the central government has been reduced from 13 to 10, but annual performances by those troupes increased from nearly 400 of the pre-reform period to 1,928 in 1997. Financially, these troupes put an end to loss-making and posted a profit of 7.43 million yuan in 1997. This experience served as a model to be applied nationwide for reforming art troupes of various sizes.

  Art education and culture-related science and technology have also undergone readjustments, and pilot programs have been undertaken in promoting rural cultural reforms and reorganizing popular cultural institutions.

  2. Artistic creation has flourished.

  To promote art development, the government has since 1987 held five Chinese art festivals featuring time-honored stage performances. These festivals have been hugely successful thanks to the participation of professional artists and the public at large. In 1991 the Ministry of Culture launched the Wenhua Award -- the highest award for professional artists given by the government. Recipients of that award include Grandpa Shangang, Remote Town, Barren land and The Geologist.

  In stage productions, the government protects and supports classical art such as orchestral music, opera and music plays, and traditional Chinese arts such as Peking Opera. The most popular shows include the New Year's Peking Opera Night and the Chinese New Year Party organized by the Ministry of Culture. In 1997 alone, 417,000 shows were staged attracting a audience of 464 million.

  3. A cultural market is fast emerging.

  The reform program has given rise to a booming cultural market. That market encompasses performances, books, newspapers and magazines, fine arts, films, audio and video products, entertainment, historical relics, Sino-foreign cultural exchanges and art training. Meanwhile, problems have arisen along with the booming market. In 1993, a national working conference was held on regulating the burgeoning cultural market. At that meeting, the principle of "attaching equal importance to cultural prosperity and market regulation" was set forth. A series of related policies and regulations have been formulated and promulgated since. The promulgation of the Regulations on Commercial Performance Administration in 1997, in particular, represented a major milestone in cultural market legislation. Over the past years, a planned and step-by-step effort to tackle problems in the cultural market has been made and the result has been good. The macro-control measures taken to regulate the performance market, in particular, have created a positive market environment for the growth of traditional Chinese arts and classical Western arts. The rearrangement of the audio and video market has resulted in an obvious increase in the market share of authentic products. Since January 1997, a program-supply system has been introduced to ensure that video projection rooms all over the country play only authentic films, thereby ensuring the healthy development of the market.

  Statistics show that by 1997 there were 257,378 business entities nationwide affiliated with cultural institutions, employing 1,160,385. That market represents not only a place for entertainment but also a source of employment and tax revenue. The cultural industry, as part of the service industry, is playing an increasingly important role.

  4. Impressive progress has been made in the development of ethnic minority cultures.

  To support the cultural development of ethnic minorities, the Ministry of Culture has mapped out a series of preferential policies for building cultural facilities in minority-inhabited areas, training ethnic artists, conducting cultural exchanges with foreign countries, and preserving cultural relics. With the assistance of the government, all the ethnic groups in China have formed their own art troupes. By 1997 those troupes numbered 526, including 59 singing and dancing troupes. In addition, there were 596 libraries, 658 cultural centers and 134 museums. The Ministry of Culture allocates more than 10 million yuan to minority-inhabited areas for building cultural facilities. To encourage artistic excellence, the government set up a Peacock Prize for ethnic artists, so far 166 have won the prize.

  Also, 24 institutions of higher learning and secondary schools nationwide are designated to train minority artists. To support the cultural development of Tibet, for example, the Ministry of Culture mobilized 14 provinces and municipalities to aid Tibet's cultural development. The first 15 projects alone involved nearly 50 billion yuan of aid.

  5. Art education has been strengthened.

  Currently, the country now has 30 institutions of higher learning devoted to art education, with a combined enrollment of 6,673 students and a staff of 21,284. In addition, 137 secondary schools employ 13,959 staff members with an enrollment of 68,594. These schools have produced such great Chinese artists as singers Guan Mucun and Dong Wenhua, as well as comedians Shi Fukuan and Jiang Kun.

  6. The cultural infrastructure has been consolidated.

  The reform and opening up program has given rise to the emergence of a host of hallmark cultural facilities in various localities. These include the National Library of China (the largest in Asia; dedicated in October 1987); the museums of Shaanxi, Shanghai, Henan and Tibet; the libraries of Shanghai, Jiangxi, Fujian and Inner Mongolia; the Changan Grand Theater of Beijing and Tianhe Book Trading Center of Guangzhou. In 1997 alone, 1,043 cultural infrastructure projects were under construction, involving a construction area of 4.5 million square meters. By the end of that year, 361 projects had been completed, with a construction area of 934,000 square meters and a total investment of 2.84 billion yuan. The Ministry of Culture alone undertook more than 30 projects, most involving over 10 million yuan each. Eight projects involved more than 100 million yuan each. The construction of a National Opera House is under way, and a number of provinces and cities have built their own opera houses and concert halls.


Overview
  In the fifty years since the founding of the People's Republic of China, especially in the two decades since the initiation of reform and opening to the outside world, China's socialist construction has scored great achievements that have attracted world attention. The national economy showed a rapid and sustained growth, the overall strength of the country expanded noticeably, the standard of living of the people improved with the passage of time and unprecedented results have been achieved in such undertakings as science and technology, education, culture, health and physical culture.

  China's economic construction has experienced both smooth development and severe setbacks. After the founding of the People's Republic, China first went through three years of economic rehabilitation. In 1953, the First Five-Year Plan for Economic and Social Development was worked out and implemented. During this period, China established more than 100 large industrial enterprises, some basic industries which had remained weak links until then as well as some new industrial sectors such as aircraft manufacturing, automobile, tractor, power generating equipment, metallurgical equipment, mining machinery, heavy and precision machinery, thus laying a preliminary foundation for socialist industrialization.

  In the decade from 1956 to 1966 prior to the eruption of the Cultural Revolution, socialist construction was carried out in an all-round way. Despite severe setbacks, Chinese economy managed to score illustrious results. New industries like electronics and petrochemical engineering came into being and the industrial layout was improved. China achieved complete self-sufficiency in oil supply from 1965 onwards. The capital construction and technical upgrading of agriculture were launched on a large scale and results were achieved gradually. Remarkable success was also achieved in science and technology. However, the "Great Leap Forward" in 1958 plus the then natural calamities severely affected the development of national economy. In the winter of 1960, a policy of readjusting, consolidating, filling in and raising standards for the national economy was adopted and China's economic construction was brought back to the right track. The Cultural Revolution, which began in 1966, resulted in a decade of social turmoil and China's economic development experienced the most severe setback and biggest loss ever since the founding of the People's Republic.

  Since the Third Plenary Session of the Eleventh CPC Central Committee convened in December 1978, the central government made the strategic decision of shifting the focus of work to socialist modernization and defined the guiding policy of revitalizing the domestic economy and opening up to the outside world. A fully fresh situation appeared in economic development through vigorously balancing the proportions of the national economy and reforming the outdated economic system. The Twelfth National Congress of the Communist Party of China worked out the overall objective for economic construction by the end of this century: striving to quadruple China's annual industrial and agricultural output value on the basis of increasing economic efficiency constantly.

  The Fourteenth National Congress of the Communist Party of China set the goal of establishing the system of socialist market economy. Resolution of the CPC Central Committee on Certain Questions of Establishing Socialist Market Economy adopted at the Fifth Plenary Session of the Fourteenth CPC Central Committee defined the general framework of China's economic reform. Thereafter, a series of important reform measures were taken and positive effects were achieved. A major step was made in the reform of the pricing system, public finance, taxation, banking, foreign trade and foreign exchange and notable results were achieved. A new mechanism for fixing the price by the market was formed initially. A new taxation system began to operate in a normal order and a system whereby tax revenue was shared by central and local authorities was implemented in a full swing. People's Bank of China was designated as the central bank implementing the monetary policy independently while the separation of policy bank and commercial bank was also under way. An operating mechanism for foreign trade that conforms to the internationally accepted rules was established after carrying out a series of measures for reforming the system of foreign trade and foreign exchange. These measures include introducing a single exchange rate, implementing the system of exchange settlement and sales by banks and reforming the management of import and export. The reform of state-owned enterprises, which is designed mainly to establish modern enterprise system, progressed steadily. And the reform related to social security, housing, education and science and technology also made new strides.

  The Eighth Five-Year Plan for Economic and Social Development (1991-1995) marked a period during which, with slightest fluctuation, China's economy developed at an all-time high speed. During the period, the central government put forward the basic policy of "seizing the opportunity to deepen the reform and open wider to the outside world, promoting development and maintaining stability." As a result, the national economy maintained a rapid and sustained development while inflation was brought under effective control and the economy as a whole began to get on a track of rapid and steady growth.

  During the period of the Eighth Five-Year Plan, the state increased its investment in infrastructure and basic industries and established new development mechanisms for these industries through reform. As a result, great strides had been made in these areas, especially in railway, highway, communication, port, airport and power industry. According to an incomplete statistics, out of the nearly RMB 600 billion yuan of various funds collected by the central government and local governments at all levels, more than 60 percent were invested in capital construction. At the same time, more decision-making rights were delegated to the local governments with regard to communication and telecommunications and more efforts were made to utilize foreign investment and collect funds through many channels. All this had promoted the development of these basic industries, strengthened Chinese economy for future development and ensured a sustained, rapid and sound development of the national economy.

  Economic development is the basis on which foreign trade grows. At the same time, the growing foreign trade also constitutes a major element in promoting economic development. During the Eighth Five-Year Plan, China's foreign trade expanded considerably and managed to become one of the ten major export countries in the world and China's percentage in the total volume of world commodity trade rose very fast. During the period from 1989 to 1991, economic readjustment narrowed the gap between demand and supply within the country , the amount of exports increased rapidly while that of imports plummeted. As a result, a favorable balance of trade appeared continuously and China's foreign exchange reserve increased at a high speed.

  In the two decades after the initiation of reform and opening to the outside world, China's economy has undergone a fundamental change from planned economy to market economy. The economic strength of the country was intensified constantly. The standard of living of the people improved gradually. The annual growth rate of GDP averaged around 10 percent and the target of quadrupling the annual industrial and agricultural output vale of the year 1980 by the end of the century was fulfilled ahead of schedule.

  In 1996, China worked out the Outline of the Ninth Five-Year Plan for National Economy and Social Development and the Long-range Objectives Through the Year 2010. Through the engineering efforts of all the people in the country, new achievements were made in reform, opening up and modernization in the beginning of the Ninth Five-Year Plan. With the goal of macro control being attained, China's economy realized "soft land". This was a sign that China's economy had entered a period of sound operation and thus laid a solid foundation for the fulfillment of the Ninth Five-Year Plan.

  In 1997, adhering to the principle of "seeking progress in the midst of stability" and the macro control policies, China continued to develop at a moderately high speed.

  In the face of the complicated and grim economic environment at home and abroad in 1998, the people of all ethnic groups in China worked hard together, surmounted numerous difficulties and scored great achievements in carrying out the reform and opening up policy and in the socialist modernization drive. The objectives for reform and development defined at the beginning of the year were basically attained. The national economy maintained a relatively rapid development. The gross domestic product for 1998 increased by 7.8 percent over the previous year. The increase was slightly lower than the targeted figure of 8 percent, but attaining 7.8 percent was not easy given the impact of the Asian financial crisis and the catastrophic floods that hit China last year. To protect China against the adverse effects of the Asian financial crisis, we adopted a policy of increasing investment and boosting domestic demand at the beginning of last year. However, the crisis became broader and deeper than it had been anticipated and exerted more of an impact on China than the country had expected. In the first half of 1998, China's economic growth rate slowed down due to a sharp decline in the growth rate of export volume and inadequate domestic demand to keep the economy growing. To address this problem, the central authorities resolutely made a decision to adopt a pro-active fiscal policy. After the National People's Congress approved the necessary changes in the budget for 1998, the State Council issued an additional 100 billion yuan of treasury bonds for investment in infrastructure development. As a result, the growth of fixed-asset investment in state-owned enterprises was much more rapid in the second half of the year, increasing by 19.5 percent for the year as a whole. Total investment in fixed assets of all segments of the economy increased by 14.1 percent. This considerable increase in investment played a prominent role in fueling economic growth.

  The Second Plenary Session of the Ninth National People's Congress was held in March 1999. It stressed that the general requirement for the work of the government in the year was as follows continue to promote reform and opening up, step up our efforts to implement the strategy of developing the country by relying on science and education and the strategy of working for sustainable development, promote economic growth mainly through the expansion of domestic demand, stabilize and strengthen agriculture, deepen the reform of state-owned enterprises, restructure the economy, make great efforts to open up more urban and rural markets, do everything possible to increase exports, take precautions against and obviate financial risks, rectify economic order, maintain a sustained, rapid and sound development of the national economy, conscientiously strengthen democracy and the legal system and promote cultural and ethical progress, work for all-round social progress, further improve the balance of reform, development and stability, ensure social and political stability and greet the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of New China with outstanding achievements in reform, opening up and the socialist modernization drive.

  The session stressed that the year 1999 was a crucial year for achieving the objective of getting most of the large and medium-sized state-owned enterprises operating at a loss out of their plight and accomplishing the initial steps in the establishment of a modern enterprise system in most of the large and medium-sized state-owned key enterprises. In 1999, governments at all levels must put a stop to redundant development and quicken the pace of industrial restructuring and reorganization; continue to guarantee the basic needs of workers laid off from state-owned enterprises and help them find new jobs; promote the separation of the functions of the government from those of the enterprises, improve the supervisory system and consolidate and improve the leadership of enterprises. People in China should continue to relax control over and invigorate small state-owned enterprises in various ways. China should adopt policies and measures to encourage, support and guide the sound development of individual proprietorship, privately-owned and other non-public sectors of the economy. Since the founding of the People's Republic and especially the adoption of the policy of reform and opening up, China's economy has shown a sustained and rapid growth, various social undertakings developed fast, the overall strength of the country was intensified constantly and the standard of living of the people improved notably. China's gross domestic product (GDP), which came to only RMB 362.41 billion yuan in 1978, amounted to 7955.3 billion yuan, 20-fold increase over 1978. China ranks No.7 in terms of total supply and demand and No.1 in terms of economic growth rate.

  According to the data provided by State Statistical Bureau, China's GDP in 1997 amounts to US$902 billion if calculated by the average exchange rate between RMB yuan and US dollars of the year. This figure ranks No.7 behind USA (US$7819.3 billion), Japan (US$4223.4 billion), German (US$2115.4 billion), France (US$1393.8 billion), Britain (US$1278.4 billion) and Italy (US$ 1146.2 billion). From 1979 to 1997, China's average annual growth rate is 9.8 percent, 6.5 percentage points higher than that of the world.

  China's output of main industrial and agricultural products occupy the front ranks of the world:

  From 1978 to 1997, China's output of coal and cloth had remained No.1; the output of cereal, cotton, rapeseeds, pork, beef, mutton, steel, cement, coal and television sets rose to No.1 in the world respectively from No.2 to No.16; the power generated and the output of chemical fertilizers climbed to No.2 respectively from No.7 and No.4; the output of crude oil increased to No.5 from No.8. Of course, the average per capita level of the country still remains fairly low.






河北:Hebei Province
 




Location: Lying on the North China Plain


Area: 187,700 sq km


Climate: The province has a temperate continental monsoon climate, which varies greatly due to its vastness, and most of the territory has clear-cut seasons. Its annual sunshine time is 2400-3100 hours. annual frost-free period 120-200 days. annual precipitation 300-800mm, annual average temperature 0 degree to 13 degree.


provincial capital: Shijiazhuang


Population: 67,44 millions (March 2001)


Ethnic groups: The population of Han nationality,accounts for 96% of the total; the rest is composed of people from 53 minority nationalities including Manchu, Hui Mongolian,Zhuang, Korean, Miao, Tujia, etc,


Major Cities: Cangzhou; Chengde; Qinhuangdao(Including Beidaihe and Shanhaiguan); Tangshan; Baoding; Zhangjiakou


Agriculture: Eastern Hebei Province is a flat, alluvial plain on which grow luxuriant crops of wheat, cotton, corn, paddy, tobacco, peanut and sesame. In the western part is the rugged Taihang Mountain Area which, besides producing wheat and other cereal crops, also grows walnut, persimmon, date and a wide variety of fruit.


Industry: Located in northeastern Hebei Province not far northeast of the great port of Tianjin is the Kailuan Coal Mines, one of the major coal producers in China. Sizable reserves of oil, iron and other deposits have also been found in the province. Petroleum are tapped on quite a scale in the Renqiu Area in southeastern Hebei Province.
描述
快速回复

您目前还是游客,请 登录注册