BEIJING: China's ruling Communist Party on Wednesday closed a pivotal congress
that approved a new leadership committee, putting Vice President Xi Jinping on
course to take power in a landmark transition.
"I now announce that the
18th Chinese Communist Party Congress has come to a victorious
conclusion," President Hu Jintao, the party leader, told some 2,200
delegates assembled in the cavernous Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
The main business of the
week-long congress, which is held every five years, had been to select a new
circle of leaders at a time when China faces major economic challenges and
growing scrutiny from its citizens.
The gathering is by far China's
most important political event as it chooses who leads the party and nation,
and this year's meeting is expected to lead to Xi's selection as the country's
chief for the next decade.
Xi took a widely-expected step
forward by being re-named on Wednesday to the 200-member Central Committee at
the congress.
The development was singled out
in a report by state-run Xinhua news agency, suggesting Xi was firmly
positioned to be announced national leader on Thursday as expected.
In the same dispatch, Xinhua
noted that Vice Premier Li Keqiang, who is tipped to become China's next
premier, was also appointed to the central committee.
The agency also focused on five
other officials believed tipped for possible inclusion in the Politburo
Standing Committee -- China's highest decision-making body and which would be
headed by Xi -- suggesting they had moved forward.
The new standing committee, now
at nine members, is due to be unveiled on Thursday.
Under the party's structure, top
leadership posts are decided in back-room political deals between factions that
break down largely on regional and patronage lines.
Xi's ascension has been expected
since 2007, when he was given a position on the standing committee. That
indicated his status as heir apparent to current President Hu, who officially
relinquishes party control this week.
Xi is expected to complete his
takeover in March when China's rubber-stamp legislature officially names him
the nation's president, while Li is strongly believed destined for the
premiership, replacing incumbent Wen Jiabao.
They are expected to serve two
five-year terms.
They will take over at an
uncertain time, when China's powerhouse economy is suffering a rare slowdown,
undercutting the party's key claim to legitimacy -- continually improving the
livelihoods of the country's 1.3 billion people.
Localised unrest is widespread in
China, typically sparked by public anger over corruption, government abuses or
the myriad manifestations of anger from the millions left out of the country's
newfound prosperity.
Anti-Chinese unrest in ethnic
Tibetan areas also has flared with a spate of self-immolation protests over the
past week.
In a speech opening the congress,
Hu warned the party, in power since 1949, must address festering problems of
corruption, environmental degradation, and calls for more political freedoms.
Widespread graft in particular,
could prove "fatal" to the party, he said.
Beijing also employs a huge
censorship apparatus to snuff out -- not always successfully -- anger at the
government expressed by hundreds of millions of users of bustling social media
sites.
The run-up to this year's
congress was further unsettled by the scandal surrounding Bo Xilai, a former
rising political star whose ambitions were torpedoed this year when his wife
was given a suspended death sentence for the murder of a British businessman.
Battening down for the congress,
authorities have flooded central Beijing with security, and placed hundreds of
activists under house arrest, rights groups say.
- AFP/xq
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