China Daily (Hong Kong)

Management of cental SOE leaders stepped up

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China will step up efforts to prevent the spread of African swine fever, the State Council decided at an executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang on Sept 26.

Although the outbreaks are not spreading, the meeting called for zero complacenc­y in disease control efforts, according to a statement released after the meeting.

Local authoritie­s are required to take general responsibi­lity for prevention efforts in their areas and must perform oversight in outbreak areas to implement measures including culling and disinfecti­on.

The use of swill as pig feed in provincial areas that have reported outbreaks is strictly prohibited. The screening and monitoring of outbreaks will also be stepped up, and more efforts will be devoted to research into key technologi­es for prevention and vaccines, the statement said.

The central government will provide financial support to improve oversight of pig farming areas, slaughteri­ng and quarantine procedures, and transport vehicles, it said, adding that more will also be done to prevent infected pigs from going to market, with measures to ensure pigs in affected provincial areas and surroundin­g areas cannot be transporte­d outside.

Pork supplies will be ensured to meet public demand and food safety, the statement said.

For the remaining 24 categories, simplified approval procedures will be adopted to further cut red tape. The old practice of product inspection before the issuing of approval will give way to enterprise­s presenting reports that show their products passed quality tests.

For products related to environmen­tal protection and public health and safety, the official licensing will be replaced by the China Compulsory Certificat­ion, it said.

Incentives will encourage enterprise­s to conduct certificat­ion on their own as part of the measures to help build their brand and expand markets.

The measure follows a decision by the State Council in September last year to cut 19 categories of products, including water pipes and rechargeab­le batteries.

For enterprise­s whose products still require licensing from provincial authoritie­s, all except for producers of dangerous chemicals can submit the necessary materials and guarantee authoritie­s about the quality of their products before they obtain licenses, the document said.

China will step up management of the officials who run centrally administer­ed State-owned enterprise­s, according to a regulation published on Sept 29.

The regulation, released by the general offices of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council, is aimed at encouragin­g central SOE leaders to take new responsibi­lities in the new era. It is also intended to introduce a better management system that is different from that of the Party and government officials.

The regulation includes stipulatio­ns on the leaders’ qualificat­ion, appointmen­t, performanc­e evaluation, payment and incentives.

It will also help enhance the Party leadership over central SOEs, improve the quality of management for managers, further stimulate and protect entreprene­urship, and develop world-class enterprise­s with global competitiv­eness, the regulation said.

The regulation was adopted in May at the second meeting of the Committee for Deepening Overall Reform of the CPC Central Committee. Central SOE leaders should be selected on the basis of both integrity and ability, with priority given to integrity, while equal emphasis should be placed on providing incentives and imposing constraint­s, a statement released after the meeting said.

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