
In the first three days of the Spring Festival, China's Lunar
New Year, Chinese President Hu Jintao visited local residents, workers who stuck
to their posts in the week-long holidays and needy families in northwestern
Gansu Province. (Xinhua Photo)
LANZHOU, Feb. 19 (Xinhua) -- In the first three days of the Spring
Festival, China's Lunar New Year, Chinese President Hu Jintao visited local
residents, workers who stuck to their posts in the week-long holidays and needy
families in northwestern Gansu Province.
On the morning of Feb. 18, Hu and other officials visited the "small West
Lake" park in the provincial capital Lanzhou City. The park was bustling with
people performing the lion dance and yangge dance -- popular rural folk dances,
playing endemic opera and displaying traditional home-made handicrafts.
Hu extended New Year's greetings to the crowd in the park and drew a dragon
picture together with a pupil there, wishing the nation stronger and more
prosperous.
The lunar new year of 2007, which starts on February 18, is also the Year
of Pig. To most Chinese, the pig is considered a symbol of wealth and good
fortune.

In the first three days of the Spring Festival, China's Lunar
New Year, Chinese President Hu Jintao visited local residents, workers who stuck
to their posts in the week-long holidays and needy families in northwestern
Gansu Province. (Xinhua Photo)
Hu then visited the provincial meteorological bureau, water supply company
and Lanzhou branch of PetroChina, extending his regards to the staff staying at
posts in holidays.
Farmers were always a group that the President is concerned about most. In
the barren countryside of Dingxi City, Hu paid a special visit to local poor
farmer Yong Wanbao's family.
Hu chatted with Yong about his life, farmland and incomes. "You might have
encountered temporary difficulties. The Party and the government will by all
means help you pull through the plight. Your life will surely get better," Hu
said.
He urged local governments to follow the scientific concept of development
and grasp the opportunities brought about by the state's strategy of developing
the vast western areas, so as to improve the local people's living standards and
contribute to the building of a harmonious society.