China Daily

Mechanical drawing

- By LI YINGXUE liyingxue@chinadaily.com.cn

Raheel Tariq has taken the Fuxing high-speed bullet train a few times from Beijing to Shanghai. He got the chance to “drive” it in front of the control panel at the ongoing exhibition commemorat­ing the 40th anniversar­y of China’s reform and opening-up.

As the first secretary at the embassy of Pakistan, Tariq visited the exhibition at the National Museum of China in Beijing on Monday, with about 1,000 guests from internatio­nal organizati­ons and embassies in China.

The exhibition, which opened last week, has six sections showcasing a wide range of sectors, including the economy, technology, environmen­t, culture and education. It presents China’s 40 years of developmen­t and the changes in people’s lives.

President Xi Jinping attended the exhibition on the opening day and called on people of all ethnicitie­s to maintain confidence and resolve to deepen reform and opening-up under the leadership of the Communist Party of China.

Tariq thought the exhibition highlighte­d all the fundamenta­ls and salient points of China’s reform and opening-up and was delighted to see how China has grown and developed.

The high-tech developmen­t in the exhibition relating to IT, communicat­ions technology, aircraft, space shuttles, nanotechno­logy and robotics impressed him the most, Tariq said.

He said Pakistan and China have been cooperatin­g in many science and technology fields, and China is helping Pakistan develop its infrastruc­ture.

Ina Marciulion­yte, the Lithuanian ambassador to China, waited a few minutes to get a cup of coffee made by a robot, which she thought was tasty. It was her first time drinking latte made by robot, and she couldn’t tell the difference from the beverage made by hand.

Having visited the National Museum many times, Marciulion­yte thought the exhibition had changed things.

“It’s really impressive,” said Marciulion­yte. “It’s as huge as China is, and it’s possible in one place to see 40 years of growth and a vision of the future.”

Marciulion­yte was impressed by the developmen­t of technology and saw opportunit­ies for cooperatio­n between the Republic of Lithuania and China in the high-tech arena.

“Every opening is really useful for the country and for the world. The more open the economy is, the easier it is to get partners and bring partnershi­ps and have some joint products that will be very useful — for the country that is opening and those that are waiting for opening,” she said.

“We’re looking forward,” she said. “President Xi Jinping said there is no way backward, and China will open even more. So we trust his words and we understand that it’s really for the future. And we can cooperate closely.”

Three years ago, Agustina Casavalle came to Beijing as the first secretary of Uruguay’s embassy in China and started to learn to speak and write Chinese.

She experience­d instructio­n in Chinese calligraph­y by a computer at the exhibition and thought it would be a good tool for practicing the writing of Chinese characters.

“I’m more informed about Chinese history and Chinese achievemen­ts today, which are very important. I think China is doing a very great job around the world, not only for its people but for all the world,” Casavalle said.

 ?? WANG ZHUANGFEI / CHINA DAILY ?? A robot draws a portrait of a diplomat from the Ethiopian embassy in China as foreign visitors tour an ongoing exhibition about China’s 40 years of reform and opening-up at the National Museum of China in Beijing on Monday.
WANG ZHUANGFEI / CHINA DAILY A robot draws a portrait of a diplomat from the Ethiopian embassy in China as foreign visitors tour an ongoing exhibition about China’s 40 years of reform and opening-up at the National Museum of China in Beijing on Monday.

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