
Chinese President Hu Jintao (C Front) reads the People's Daily
while inspecting the People's Daily office in Beijing, capital of China, June
20, 2008. President Hu on Friday hailed the 60th anniversary of the start of
publication of the People's Daily, the voice of the Communist Party of China,
and extended his salute to all Chinese journalists.
BEIJING, June 20 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu Jintao on Friday hailed
the 60th anniversary of the People's Daily, the voice of the Communist Party of
China (CPC), and extended his salute to all Chinese journalists.
After inspecting the People's Daily, Hu encouraged reporters and editors to
innovate their reporting styles and bring into a full play the paper's leading
role.
He sent his greetings to the paper's overseas correspondents and asked them
to link the transformation of the international situation with China's reform
and opening-up. This was to improve the quality and influence of the paper's
international reporting. It has 33 overseas bureaus.
Hu, also general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, visited
people.com.cn, the online arm of the daily newspaper and a leading news portal
in China. Over 11 years of development, the website now received about 100
million visits daily.
He then held his first live online chat with netizens on Friday, telling
them divergent voices could be heard in the country.

Chinese President Hu Jintao (C) inspects the People's Daily, the
voice of the Communist Party of China, in Beijing, capital of China, June 20,
2008. Hu on Friday hailed the 60th anniversary of the start of publication of
the People's Daily and extended his salute to all Chinese journalists.
Hu, who said he sometimes found time to surf the web, said in his chat with
netizens, "I try to know through the Internet what people are concerned about
and what they think (on a wide range of topics)."
"I'm willing to get an idea on people's complaints of and proposals to the
work of our Party and the government.
"The Internet is an important space to know about people's thoughts," said
Hu, who revealed the BBS of people.com.cn was his must-visit while surfing the
web.
The "BBS" he mentioned was the Qiangguo Forum, with the literal meaning in
Chinese of "powering the nation." The virtual-reality forum was initiated by
netizens to express anger at the U.S.-led NATO forces bombing of the Chinese
embassy in Belgrade in 1999. Since then, the forum has been one of the most
popular venues for netizens to speak out.
Hu's four minute live chat with netizens highlighted the recent efforts of
the government to directly contact the people.
He told the paper's staff that with the rapid social and economic
development it's more convenient and faster now for people to obtain and spread
information and the role of public opinion was more significant than ever.
He asked newsmen to stick to the CPC principle, serve the people,
constantly reform to enhance influence and strengthen the use of new media in
their daily work.

Chinese President Hu Jintao (C) inspects the People's Daily, the
voice of the Communist Party of China, in Beijing, capital of China, June 20,
2008. Hu on Friday hailed the 60th anniversary of the start of publication of
the People's Daily and extended his salute to all Chinese journalists.