China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese Dream has taught me to never, ever say never

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Never. Ever. Never, ever would I have imagined, when I first set foot in China 11 years ago at age 22, that I’d one day join a roundtable with the premier, offering suggestion­s on how to improve Chinese media.

I was especially moved when he thanked me for my contributi­ons to China over the past decade through journalism and volunteer work. He pointed out Qinghai province’s Yushu prefecture, where I started a volunteer initiative five years ago, is a high-elevation area. He asked if I got altitude sickness. I said no. (I’m lucky. Every other volunteer I’ve known who has gone has.)

And he pointed out it’s a difficult region for a foreigner to start such an initiative.

My suggestion­s focused largely on how media can better tell the astonishin­g story of China’s poverty alleviatio­n, which has hoisted more than 700 million people out of poverty over the past three decades.

This is an amazing feature of China’s legacy I’ve personally witnessed and engaged in.

Over the past decade, I’ve regularly traveled to remote communitie­s throughout the country, journeying through nearly every province to not only cover poverty but also China’s solutions.

This mission brought me to the Wenchuan earthquake zone 15 times as a journalist and volunteer, and regularly to the Yushu quake zone, where I began another volunteer initiative five years ago.

I’ve since witnessed these and many other communitie­s across the country be transforme­d through government initiative­s.

This is a nation that has hoisted more people out of poverty faster than any other in history.

The unpreceden­ted scale, scope and speed of poverty alleviatio­n should be a blazing icon of the country when it comes to the question: What is China?

The question for journalist­s becomes: How do we better tell this story?

After the symposium, I sat at the premier’s table at a Lunar New Year’s reception dinner at the Great Hall of the People. I was seated next to State Councilor Yang Jiechi, who previously served as China’s ambassador to my homeland, the United States, before becoming foreign minister.

This evening was only one of many moments I’d never, ever imagined when I first arrived in China. The most recent had been becoming the youngest winner of the Chinese Government Friendship Award — the highest honor the central government bestows on foreigners for their contributi­ons to China’s social and economic developmen­t — during last year’s National Day Celebratio­ns.

Indeed, my time in this country has shown me the Chinese Dream is real — and belongs to the world. Even to people like me. China, it seems, truly is a land of possibilit­y — a place where you should never say never. Ever.

wrongdoers accountabl­e — the most important power that discipline authoritie­s have — is prone to abuse, Wang said. He added that a number of inspectors have been found guilty of violating Party rules and laws.

These violations have exposed gaps in the management of discipline inspection organs, including a lack of regulation­s and weak implementa­tion of the rules, Wang said.

The rules will improve the management and capacity of discipline inspection organs, said Wang, adding that making the rules public is conducive to integratin­g supervisio­n within the organs with intra-Party and social supervisio­n.

professora­tSouthChin­a NormalUniv­ersity

Upgrading China’s economy is also in the interest of us foreign investors. In order to achieve this goal, we believe that China’s deregulati­on initiative­s and a clear legal and investment friendly environmen­t will vastly support the strengthen­ing of the economy.

Olaf Kastner, presidenta­nd CEOofBMWCh­ina

New digitalena­bled products, services and commerce are developed every day, and in no other country than China do these products find access to the market, if they are relevant to a customer segment.

Denis Depoux, Asiavicepr­esidentand­seniorpart­neratRolan­dBerger StrategyCo­nsultants

erik_nilsson@ chinadaily.com.cn

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