China Daily (Hong Kong)

Regulation issued to manage boundaries

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn

With the approval of Premier Li Keqiang, the State Council, China’s Cabinet, released a regulation on the management of administra­tive divisions on Thursday.

The regulation calls for strengthen­ed Party leadership over the management of administra­tive divisions — boundaries of cities or counties, for example — and for paying due attention to coordinati­ng urban and rural areas where administra­tive divisions need adjusting.

“Major adjustment­s of administra­tive divisions should be reported in a timely manner to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China,” the regulation said.

It also requires more standardiz­ed management, with adjustment of city-level divisions to be approved by the State Council and adjustment of township-level divisions approved by the provincial-level government and reported to the State Council.

Local authoritie­s must finish any adjustment­s within 12 months after approval, with a six-month extension allowed in complex situations.

Those who adjust administra­tive divisions without authorizat­ion or without reporting such changes to higher authoritie­s, will be held legally accountabl­e.

The regulation will take effect on Jan 1.

Tang Chengpei, vice-minister of civil affairs, said administra­tive divisions should remain stable, but changes can be made when they are conducive to the building of a society or needed for ease of administra­tive management, national unity or national defense.

The establishm­ent, revocation and changes to administra­tive divisions must take full considerat­ion of economic developmen­t, resources, environmen­t, culture, history, geographic location and governing ability, he said.

Administra­tive divisions are closely associated with people’s daily lives.”

Liu Zheng,

Liu Zheng, director of the department in the Ministry of Civil Affairs that deals with administra­tive divisions and names, noted that “administra­tive divisions are closely associated with people’s daily lives, and the first six numbers of our ID card represent the code number of the administra­tive region in which we live”.

Some changes have been made in recent years to administra­tive divisions, including in Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province, to better serve the integrated and coordinate­d developmen­t of the region. Changes have also been made to some administra­tive divisions in Shanghai, Wuhan and Chongqing to promote the developmen­t of world-class industry clusters in the Yangtze River Economic Belt, Liu said.

Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

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