Fiji Sun

China Proposes to Let Xi Extend Presidency Beyond 2023

- HOw SIGNIfiCAN­T IS THIS? Feedback: jyotip@fijisun.com.fj

China’s governing Communist Party has proposed removing a clause in the constituti­on which limits presidenci­es to two five-year terms.

The move would allow the current President Xi Jinping to remain as leader after he is due to step down. There had been widespread speculatio­n that Mr Xi would seek to extend his presidency beyond 2023. Party congress last year saw him cement his status as the most powerful leader since the late Mao Zedong.

His ideology was also enshrined in the party’s constituti­on at the congress, and in a break with convention, no obvious successor was unveiled.

Born in 1953, Mr Xi is the son of one of the Communist Party’s founding fathers. He joined the party in 1974, climbing its ranks before becoming president in 2013.

His presidency has seen economic reform, a fierce campaign against corruption, as well as a resurgence in nationalis­m and a crackdown on human rights.

What do we know about the move?

The announceme­nt was carried on state news agency Xinhua on Sunday.

“The Communist Party of China Central Committee proposed to remove the expression that the President and Vice-President of the People’s Republic of China ‘shall serve no more than two consecutiv­e terms’ from the country’s Constituti­on,” it reported.

It gave no other details, but the full proposal was due to be released later.

The announceme­nt appears carefully timed, with many Chinese people due to return to work on Monday after celebratin­g the Chi- nese New Year. China was also centre stage at the closing ceremony of the Winter Olympics, as South Korea prepared to hand the Games over to Beijing for 2022.

The top officials who make up the party’s Central Committee are due to meet on Monday in Beijing. The proposal must be approved by China’s parliament, the National People’s Congress, which begins its annual meeting on March 5, but most expect this to be a formality. Under the current system, Mr Xi was due to step down in 2023.

The tradition of limiting presidenci­es to 10 years emerged in the 1990s, when veteran leader Deng Xiaoping sought to avoid a repeat of the chaos that had marked the Mao era and its immediate aftermath. Mr Xi’s two predecesso­rs have followed the orderly pattern of succession. But since he came to power in 2012 he has shown a readiness to write his own rules.

It is not clear how long Mr Xi might stay in power, but an editorial in China’s state-run Global Times said the change did not mean “that the Chinese president will have a lifelong tenure”.

The paper quoted Su Wei, a Communist Party academic and party member, as saying it was a significan­t decision as China needed a “stable, strong and consistent leadership” from 2020-2035.

But the prospect of further removing restraints on Mr Xi’s power has alarmed some observers. “I think he will become emperor for life,” Willy Lam, politics professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told AFP news agency.

 ??  ?? President Xi Jinping.
President Xi Jinping.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji