President Hu Jintao said the success of the first stage of
China's lunar probe program indicated the nation had
joined countries with capability of deep space exploration.
Hu made the remarks at a grand ceremony held Wednesday morning
at the Great Hall of the People to celebrate the first-phase lunar
probe project's success.
He said the lunar probe was another milestone in China's space
exploration, following the successes of man-made satellites and
manned space flights.
It was also another symbolic result of China's efforts to
enhance self-innovation and build an innovative nation and a
historical stride the nation made in its way toward world's peak of
science and technology, Hu said.
According to him, the key to settlement of all problems China is
facing lies in independent development.
The development of the nation's scientific and technological
strength must be based on economic development, Hu said.
Only when development is regarded as the primary task of the
Party in its ruling efforts, will new achievements be made in the
development process and will the gap between China and world's
advanced standards be narrowed, he added.
Enhancing capability of self-innovation is the core of China's
national development strategy and the key to improving the overall
national strength, according to Hu.
Development of the real core technologies in crucial fields that
are related to the life line of the national economy and to the
national security must rely on self innovation, Hu stressed.
"We should adhere to self-innovation with Chinese
characteristics and make full use of the socialist system's
advantages in centralizing various forces to do a big feat,"Hu
said.
Exertions should be made to command a group of core technologies
and possess a batch of intellectual property rights in key areas
and some fronts of scientific and technological development.
Hu said capable people were the most valued resources for a
cause and were the key to the development of the Party's and the
nation's undertakings.
"In the final analysis, competitiveness in overall national
strength at present is based on competition for capable people,
talents with high quality in particular," he said.
The achievements China's space missions have made and experience
that have been drawn from them show that only when a conception of
taking human as the primary resources is built and when forces of
talented people are cultivated, can an initiative status be
achieved in fierce international competition.
Chang'e-1, named after a mythical Chinese goddess who, according
to legend, flew to the moon, blasted off on a Long March 3A carrier
rocket on Oct. 24 from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in the
southwestern province of Sichuan.
The satellite traveled nearly two million kilometers in its
15-day flight to the moon and reached its final working orbit with
a fixed altitude of 200 kilometers on Nov. 7.
The China National Space Administration released the first
picture of the moon captured by Chang'e-1 on Nov. 26, marking the
full success of the first stage of the country's lunar probe
program.
(Xinhua News Agency December 12, 2007)