BEIJING, May 11 (Xinhuanet)
-- James CY Soong, chairman of the People First Party (PFP) in Taiwan, has
become a household name as mainland reporters closely track his nine-day "bridge
building" trip.
Upon the 40-member PFP
delegation's arrival last Thursday in Xi'an, a fierce contest for news began to
sprawl among televisions, radio stations, newspapers and wire services,
providing easy access to the general public on the landmark event in the history
of cross-Straits party-to-party exchanges.
During the past few days,
Soong and his delegation visited Xi'an, Nanjing, Shanghai and Changsha.
Soong arrived in Beijing
Tuesday afternoon. Many influential Beijing-based newspapers such as the
People's Daily, the Xinhua Daily Telegraph and the Beijing Daily all featured it
as the lead story Wednesday. Beijing is the last leg of Soong's trip to the
Chinese mainland and he is scheduled to meet with Hu Jintao, general secretary
of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee.
The People's Daily even
reserved a special page for detailing news on Soong's every leg with graphs,
pictures and thorough reports.
In the meantime, Wednesday's
Xinhua Daily Telegraph boldfaced Soong's speech at the Beijing Capital Airport:
"It is up to the Chinese people to cope with their own problems."
On the same page, a side-bar
story by a Xinhua staff writer read: "Although temperatures from central-south
China's Changsha to Beijing in the north plummeted, the enthusiasm of general
public toward Soong and his peers does not weaken to the least."
In Wednesday's China Youth
Daily, the story of Soong's visit of the millennial Yuelu Academy in Changsha
was front-paged when Soong said there that no one could "block the trend of
rejuvenation for the Chinese nation."
To draw the attention of
local readerships, Wednesday's BeijingDaily placed a group of stories on the
front page, which depicted the airport crowd craving to meet Soong in person,
Soong's humorous Beijing dialect in airport speech, faculty and students of
Qinghua (Tsinghua) University vying to get admission tickets for Soong's lecture
in campus and a poem written by an 84-year-oldnative of Beijing in honor of the
PFP delegation's visit.
In the Focus Section of
Wednesday's Beijing Youth Daily, all information related to Soong's speech at
Qinghua, including the route he took, the design of admission tickets and the
presents hewas to receive, were detailed.
Many television stations on
the mainland, including the Beijing-based China Central Television, the
Shanghai-based Oriental Television and local cable TVs have invited big-name
scholars to comment on live broadcasts.