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World Expo 2010

World Expo |
SHANGHAI'S commit-ment and ambition to
recreate itself as a world city is clear,
and part of the strategy is to bring world
events to the city.In 1999 Shanghai hosted
the Fortune Global Forum, in 2001 the
APEC summit, last year saw the Master's
Cup in world tennis and next year it expects
to host its first Formula One race.
Through these events, Shanghai attracts
people from all over the world and catches
global attention, building up the profile
that Shanghai, and China as a whole, is
winning on the world stage.
But none of these events can compare
to what will happen in 2010. The World
Expo 2010 is projected to attract over
100 nations to showcase their culture
and technology, drawing 70 million visitors.
Shanghai, which used to be known as the
"Paris of the East," will once
again stand in the spotlight of the world.
The Shanghai Expo presents an opportunity
to showcase the city's extraordinary growth
over the last two decades, as well as
an opportunity to unveil Shanghai's rebirth
as a world city, as Asia's primary financial
centre, and as a window onto the new China,
said Victor Mallet, chief Asia correspondent
of the Financial Times.
China is engaging more fully with the
world on a diplomatic level, its economy
is the envy of the world, and Shanghai
is at the forefront of this economic expansion.
But to be a world-class city, Shanghai
needs more than economic investment.
According to Mallet: "Economic growth
is essential for China and for Shanghai,
but it would be wrong to make that the
only message broadcast to the world."
His view is echoed by Yu Wujin, a professor
at Fudan University. Yu said the World
Expo 2010 is not only an important force
to lift the standard of living of Shanghai
residents, but also a significant opportunity
to promote the city's humanistic spirit.
Shanghai won its fame in China for its
unique cultural combination of acute political
awareness, ardent national feeling, diversified
ideological ferment and avant garde cultural
consciousness.
As Shanghai becomes more integrated into
the world, carrying forward its aim to
be an international metropolis, "it's
very necessary to discuss how Shanghai
should present itself on the world stage
and how we should enhance its humanistic
spirit," Yu said.
"The coming Expo is a critical opportunity
to bring Shanghai's humanistic spirit
and the people's culture to a new level,
making the city a brilliant star on the
international stage," he concluded.
New images
World Expos have traditionally helped
promote the cities that host them. The
Expo leaves a rich legacy in the shape
of investment in infrastructure and city
planning. Look at the landmarks Expo have
left: the Crystal Palace in London in
1851 (since destroyed by fire), the Eiffel
Tower in Paris in 1889 and the Space Needle
in Seattle in 1960.
No wonder Vice Mayor Zhou Yupeng recently
rejected worries that the 2010 Expo Shanghai
could lose money, calling them "short-sighted
and narrow-minded."
"Some of the facilities will be
kept after the Expo, thus the economic
and cultural effect of the Expo will persist
for many years," Zhou said.
Tatiana Romanchenko, general manager
of Interfax China said the Expo host country
will gain a new political status.
"One can say that it will automatically
give China economic priority in international
economic relations for quite a long time
to come," she said.
But to really achieve this ambitious
goal, enormous work is yet to be done.
According to Richard Wooldridge, the
president and COO of IHT, China's gigantic
and culturally diverse canvas poses a
real challenge for the rest of the world
to fully understand and comprehend.
He said that in the West, there is outright
ignorance about and misunderstanding of
China: ignorance about her history and
potential for the future. "So much
ignorance," he stressed.
Both Shanghai and central governments
are aware of this. Last year, several
international publications, including
the Financial Times and the International
Herald Tribune, carried pages of a supplement
designed to brand Shanghai as an international
city, fit and ready for the Expo. Such
public relations campaigns are costly.
On a more esoteric level, said Brian
Rhoads, chief correspondent of Reuters
China, the truly great fairs appear to
have been those that demonstrated most
effectively where a country or even a
society has been, where it is and where
it is going.
"But we will be looking for how
it [Expo 2010] will effectively illustrate
this to capture the world's imagination,"
he said.
The Financial Times' Victor Mallet drew
an analogy between Shanghai and France.
Millions of tourists go to France each
year and contribute to its economy. They
go there for the food, for the culture,
for the architecture and for the fun.
"I hope the same will be true for
Shanghai, both before and after 2010,"
he said.
From "Shanghai Star"
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