New
man at helm: Xi Jinping elected to lead China
Xi
Jinping has been elected General Secretary of the Communist Party of
China and will also now be the country’s commander-in-chief, making
him de facto leader of the world’s most populous country.
RT,
15
November, 2012
In
a no-surprise promotion on Thursday, veteran politician Xi was
confirmed to be China's paramount leader for the next 10 years.
Wearing a dark suit, he led the new seven-man Central Politburo
Standing Committee – the highest decision-making body in China,
composed of senior state officials – to their unveiling in the
monumental Great Hall of the People.
Xi
has also been named chairman of the Central Military Commission,
putting China’s military under his control. The news comes as the
Communist Party of China (CPC) wrapped up its 18th congress.
The
59-year-old son of the late communist elder Xi Zhongxun, Xi Jinping
is part of the "princeling" generation – offspring of
figures who played key roles in bringing the Communist Party to power
in 1949.
Like
many other young educated Chinese, he was sent to live in the
countryside to live and work in exile alongside peasants during
Chairman Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution of 1966-76.
Newly-elected
General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of
China. (AFP Photo / Carlos Barria)
In
his acceptance speech, Xi admitted that the Communist Party has its
problems with corruption, detachment from the people and bureaucratic
tendencies among some of its members.
He
pledged to address these issues by working “with all the comrades
in the party to uphold the principle that the party should supervise
its own conduct and run itself with strict discipline."
He
also praised the people of China, saying that their “desire for a
better life is what we shall fight for” and that ''If we unite as
one people, there is no difficulty we cannot overcome.''
"It
is the people who have created history, and it is the people who are
true heroes. The people are the source of our strength," Xi
said.
The
new leader replaces Hu Jintao, under whose administration China saw a
decade of extraordinary growth despite the global financial crisis.
Xi
was first unofficially slated to take this position five years ago
during the previous congress of the CPC. He’s been a member of the
Standing Committee of the Politburo since 2007.
He
is believed to be a pragmatic and skilled politician capable of
finding consensus among different factions in the party. Like his
predecessor, he is expected to continue cautiously opening China’s
economy to market reforms while maintaining tight grasp on the
political sphere.
“The
new leadership showed that China valued stability and continuity
above everything else. They will continue to grow economically, but
politically there will not be any changes,” Francis Lun, managing
director of Lyncean holdings, told RT.
His
term in office may bring more change in the public image of Chinese
leaders, especially abroad. For more than 20 years he has been
married to acclaimed Chinese folk music singer Peng Liyuan, who has
long been better-known to the general public than her husband. She is
also a civilian member of the army, holding the rank of a major
general and a position in the military musical troupe.
Some
observers expect Peng to take a more active role than the wives of
previous Chinese leaders, serving as counterpart to first ladies in
Western countries.
Xi
and Peng have a daughter, Xi Mingze, who is currently studying at
Harvard.
The
six other members of the newly-elected committee are Li Keqiang,
Zhang Dejiang, Yu Zhengsheng, Liu Yunshan, Wang Qishan, and Zhang
Gaoli.
The
new Chinese leadership will gradually take over responsibility for
the country over the next several months. Hu Jintao's presidency will
formally end at the annual parliamentary session in March 2013.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDelete