Horticultural Fair Ends with Praise, Progress
Kunming, the spring city, was in the limelight again on the night of
October 31 as the China '99 Kunming International Horticultural Exposition (Expo '99)
officially wrapped up its 184-day stint.
The grand horticultural fair, which opened on May 1, was declared a colossal success by
organizers and visitors. More than 9.4 million Chinese and foreigners visited the
unprecedented exhibition during the past six months, successfully fulfilling the goal of 8
million to 10 million tourists.
The closing ceremony, held at the Yunnan Art Theatre, was attended by Vice-Premier Li
Lanqing, also
chairman of the Organizing Committee of Expo '99, and Ole Philipson, president of the
Bureau International
des Expositions, and Bernd Werner, chairman of the Association Internationale des
Producteurs de
l'Horticulture.
During the ceremony, flags of Bureau International des Expositions and Association
Internationale des
Producteurs del'Horticulture that were on loan during the exhibition were returned to the
representatives of the
two international organizations. The flags were then transferred to two Dutch
representatives. The first
horticultural show of the new century, Floriade 2002, is to be held in the Netherlands.
In recognition of Expo '99's unprecedented success, the two international organizations,
BIE and AIPH,
issued a special award to the Chinese Government. The Yunnan provincial government
received a prize for
excellent organization and the Yunnan Provincial Horticultural Exposition Bureau was
awarded for its
contributions to this year's event.
Eight top exhibition prizes were also rewarded to Japan, France and China during the
closing ceremony. The
Competition Evaluation Committee of Expo '99 issued a total of 2,777 prizes.
The organizing committee yesterday afternoon held a summary and commendation conference,
during which
Yunnan Province received the "special contribution prize."
Li Lanqing highly praised the fair's success. He said that the fair took less than three
years to organize and
prepare was a "true miracle" in the history of international horticultural
expositions.
Over the course of Expo '99, several nations and international organizations hosted a
total of 51 garden theme
days, more than 50 conferences and academic seminars and helped stage more than 1,000
cultural
performances. The event resulted an estimated 14 billion yuan (US$1.69 billion) in
domestic trade.
After Expo '99's curtain call, the World Horti-Expo Garden will keep its original
appearance and remain open
to the public over the next six months.
Organizers say the exposition site will be further upgraded and eventually developed into
an "internationally
famous garden."
All outdoor exhibition areas, the Greenhouse and the Science and Technology Hall will be
kept intact.
(Chinadaily News)