China cements place in scientific elite
Guo's words concluded the two-week National Science Conference, a seminal meeting during which Deng Xiaoping, the architect of the reform and opening-up policy, gave the green light for scientific development and called on the nation to respect and support intellectuals.
The impact of that meeting is still being felt today. Indeed, last year will go down as one of the most pivotal for China's scientific ambitions. It not only marked the 40th anniversary of reform and opening-up, which created the socioeconomic stability and prosperity crucial for scientific development, but also saw scientists forge new ground and break through technological blockages to turn the country into one of the world's most influential science and innovation hubs.
From stars to cells, new discoveries and milestones were made almost every other month.
- Chinese sailor forced to halt Antarctic expedition after robbery
- French, Chinese artists revive industrial heritage in Hunan
- New engineering academicians vow to advance scientific innovation
- Former top railway official expelled from CPC
- Mainland says Taiwan's Lai a 'peace breaker' and 'troublemaker'
- New materials reinforce Nanjing war truth






























