BEIJING (AP) — China’s ruling communists opened a pivotal
congress to initiate a power handover by giving a nod to their revolutionary
past and broadly promising cleaner government while keeping off-stage the main
event — the bargaining over seats in the new leadership.
All the main players were arrayed
on the stage in the Great Hall of the People: President Hu Jintao, his
successor Xi Jinping and a collection of retired party insiders. A golden
hammer and sickle, the Communist Party’s symbol, hung on the back wall. Yet in
a nearly two-hour opening ceremony Thursday, scant mention was made of the
transition or that in a week Hu will step down as party chief in favor of Xi in
what would be only the second orderly transfer of power in 63 years of
communist rule.
The congress is writ small the
state of Chinese politics today. It’s a largely ceremonial gathering of
2,200-plus delegates who meet while the real deal-making is done
behind-the-scenes by the true power-holders.
The centerpiece event of the
opening of the weeklong congress — a 90-minute speech by Hu — served politics,
allowing him to define his legacy after a decade in office, while marshaling
his clout to install his allies in the collective leadership that Xi will head.
“An important thing for him is to
make sure that there’s no critical, no negative summary judgment of the past 10
years,” said Ding Xueliang, a Chinese politics expert at Hong Kong University
of Science and Technology. Still, Ding said, “90 percent of the effort is on
putting your people in place.”
The party’s public silence on a
leadership transition that everyone knows is taking place and that politically
minded Chinese have been discussing has deepened a palpable sense of public
unease. Many Chinese feel the country is at a turning point, in need of new
ideas to handle a slowing economy, growing piles of debt and rising public
demands for more accountable, transparent government, if not democracy.
In signs of the public disquiet,
at least five ethnic Tibetans in western China set themselves on fire Wednesday
or Thursday in protests against Chinese rule of Tibetan areas, according to
overseas Tibet support groups and the Tibetan government-in-exile in India.
At dawn in Tiananmen Square, next
to the congress venue, a woman in her 30s threw pieces of torn paper into the
air and shouted “bandits and robbers!” — a curse often leveled at corrupt local
officials. She was taken away by the security forces, which have smothered all
of Beijing for the congress.
In his speech, Hu cited many of the
challenges China faces — a rich-poor gap, environmentally ruinous growth and
imbalanced development between prosperous cities and a struggling countryside.
Yet he offered little fresh thinking to address them and said restoring a
relatively high growth would be the best way to deal with public expectations.
Only on tackling rampant
corruption did Hu sound the alarm. He called on party members to be ethical and
rein in their family members whose often showy displays of wealth have stoked
public anger.
“Nobody is above the law,” Hu
said to the applause of the 2,309 delegates and invited guests, with Xi and
other party notables on the dais behind him. He later said, “If we fail to
handle this issue well, it could prove fatal to the party, and even cause the
collapse of the party and the fall of the state.”
Always an occasion for divisive
bargaining, the leadership transition has been made more fraught by scandals
that have fueled already high public cynicism that Chinese leaders are more
concerned with power and wealth than government.
In recent months, one top leader,
Bo Xilai, has been purged after his wife murdered a British businessman; a top
aide to Hu was sidelined after his son crashed a Ferrari he shouldn’t have been
able to afford and foreign media reported that relatives of Xi and outgoing
Premier Wen Jiabao had traded on their proximity to power to amass vast
fortunes.
Public image aside, the scandals
have especially weakened Hu, on whose watch they occurred, in the power-broking
over the next leadership. In recent decades, the leadership line-ups have
sought to balance different factions within the party. Who has prevailed won’t
be apparent until next Thursday, a day after the congress, when the members of
the Politburo Standing Committee appear before the media.
On stage with Hu appeared one of
his nemeses, his predecessor Jiang Zemin, who has supported Xi and is angling
to fill many of the seats in the leadership with his allies. Nearby, dressed in
a Mao jacket, sat 95-year-old Song Ping, a veteran of the revolution and party
insider who was Hu’s earliest political mentor.
Hu drew the line on political
reform, a catchphrase for everything from greater transparency to democracy,
even though retired party members, media commentators and government think
tanks have called it an urgent need.
Hu’s signature policy — a
grab-bag of ideas meant to promote more balanced growth and stronger party rule
that goes under the clunky phrase “the Scientific Outlook on Development” — has
already been adopted in the party constitution. Hu’s report to the congress
called it “a powerful theoretical weapon” to guide the party.
“Even though this congress is
about rejuvenation, passing the power to the young, what we see is the
opposite,” said Willy Lam of Chinese University of Hong Kong.
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