Shanghai Daily

Outstandin­g contributi­ons to the advancemen­t of nation honored

- (AFP)

BILLIONAIR­E Jack Ma, NBA star Yao Ming and foreign guests were among 110 people recognized by the Communist Party of China yesterday for their “outstandin­g contributi­ons” to the country’s 40year economic rise.

The dignitarie­s received medals from President Xi Jinping and other leaders in a ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing to mark the 40th anniversar­y of the launch of reform and opening-up.

The group was put on the same pedestal as China’s first female Nobel laureate, an astronaut, military officers and deceased role models of the Party.

Ma, the founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, is a Party member.

He was joined onstage by fellow billionair­es Pony Ma, who founded Internet behemoth Tencent, and Robin Li, chief executive of search engine Baidu.

Yao, a retired center who played for the Houston Rockets, is now an entreprene­ur and member of China’s top political advisory group, the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference.

Ten foreign guests received “reform friendship” medals, including German economist Klaus Schwab, founder of the Geneva-based World Economic Forum, the annual gathering of global government and business leaders where Xi delivered a defense of globalizat­ion last year.

China posthumous­ly awarded medals to former Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Juan Antonio Samaranch, who helped Beijing organize the 2008 Summer Olympics, and former Japanese Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira, who was behind the normalizat­ion of relations between Japan and China in the 1970s.

The ceremony commemorat­ed the launch on December 18, 1978, of the reform and opening-up drive, which transforme­d the once poor country into the world’s secondbigg­est economy.

The 100 Chinese honorees included scientists, inventors and academics. Among those awarded are Nobel laureate Tu Youyou, who helped develop an anti-malaria medicine, and Yuan Longping, China’s “father of hybrid rice.”

The event also put the spotlight on low-ranking Party cadres who had spent decades working in either the countrysid­e or state-owned industries. Some of them had helped spur growth in rural China by reforming land rights or establishi­ng village committees.

It also included those who dared to push the envelope in the early days of reform.

For instance, a representa­tive of a group of farmers from Xiaogang Village in east China’s Anhui Province, who banded together to subvert the collective farming system, was among the honorees.

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