2005 in China
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Other events of 2005 List of years in China Timeline of Chinese history 2005 in the Republic of China 2005 in Macau |
Events in the year 2005 in China.
Incumbents
- Party General Secretary – Hu Jintao
- President – Hu Jintao
- Premier – Wen Jiabao
- Congress Chairman – Wu Bangguo
- Conference Chairman – Jia Qinglin
Events
March
- March 14 – Anti-Secession Law: The People's Republic of China ratifies an anti-secession law, aimed at preventing Taiwan from declaring independence.[1]
April
- April 11 – Anti-Japanese demonstrations in China: 20,000 protesters marching in two cities in southern Guangdong province objecting to a recently amended Japanese schoolbook which allegedly glosses over Japan's imperialist past.[2]
- April 18 – 2005 anti-Japanese demonstrations: Sino-Japanese relations worsen after a meeting between Chinese State Councilor Tang Jiaxuan, Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing, and Japanese Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura in Beijing. China continues to refuse an apology for the increasing number of anti-Japanese protests, and further accuses Japan for handling the issues of history and Taiwan "incorrectly".[3]
August
- August 18 – Peace Mission 2005, the first joint China–Russia military exercise, begins its 8-day training on the Shandong peninsula.
October
- October 12 – The second Chinese spacecraft, Shenzhou 6, is launched, carrying Fei Junlong and Nie Haisheng for 5 days in orbit.
- October 15 - Qinghai-Tibet Railway is completed in China
November
- November 13 – Jilin chemical plant explosions 2005: a series of explosions occurred in a chemical Plant in Jilin City. The explosions killed six, injured dozens, and caused the evacuation of tens of thousands of residents.[4] During the incident a large discharge of nitrobenzene went into the Songhua River. Levels of the carcinogen were so high that the entire water supply to Harbin city (pop 3.8M) was cut off for five days between November 21, 2005 and November 26, 2005.[5]
- November 26 - SM City Jinjiang, the second SM Mall in the Chinese Mainland was opened.
Deaths
- January 17 – Zhao Ziyang, Chinese premier (born 1919)
- April 24 – Fei Xiaotong, a pioneering Chinese researcher and professor of sociology and anthropology (born 1910)
- July 2 – Gu Yue, Chinese actor (born 1937)
- July 6 – Huang Kun, a well-known Chinese physicist (born 1919)
- August 7 – Li Lili, Chinese film actress (born 1915)
- August 18 – Gao Xiumin, well-known Chinese comedy actress (born 1959)
- August 30 – Fu Biao, famous Chinese actor (born 1963)
- October 17 – Ba Jin, Chinese writer (born 1904)
- October 26 – Rong Yiren, the Vice-President of the People's Republic of China from 1993 to 1998 (born 1916)
- December 23 – Yao Wenyuan, Chinese politician (born 1931)
See also
References
- ↑ "Countries support Anti-Secession Law". China Daily. 2005-03-16. Retrieved 2009-10-21.
- ↑ CNN
- ↑ Radio Australia
- ↑ Xinhua
- ↑ "China city water supply to resume". BBC. 2005-11-27.
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