Millennium Post

China’s Communist Party to meet to review key polices

CPC will meet on Monday to discuss the trade war with the United States, slowing economic growth and handling of a political crisis in Hong Kong

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BEIJING: China’s ruling Communist Party would meet here on Monday after an unusually

long delay to discuss the leadership’s handling of Hong Kong’s unpreceden­ted pro-democracy protests, the economy’s slowdown and the US deal to end the trade war.

The 25-member Political Bureau (PB) which is the top policy body of the Communist Party of China (CPC) on Thursday decided to hold the fourth Plenary session from October 28 to 31 here, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

The meeting was presided over by President Xi Jinping who continues to retain a firm grip on power, holding the key posts of the General Secretary of the CPC, head of the military besides the Presidency, becoming the most powerful

leader after party’s founder Mao Zedong.

Observers say the significan­ce of the top decision-making bodies of the CPC since the advent of Xi to power in 2012 has declined as he firmly estab

lished his stamp of authority, doing away with the past system of collective leadership.

Xi was re-elected for a second five-year tenure last year by the National People’s Congress (NPC) which also scrapped the two-term rule for the President, paving the way for his lifelong tenure.

The Plenary session is a closed-door meeting of the party’s roughly 370-member Central Committee, which is also its high powered decision making body.

It will be the fourth plenary session after the 2017 party congress, ushering in Xi’s second term in office. The last plenum was held in February, 2018.

Among other issues, the Plenary meeting is also expected to discuss Xi’s second informal summit with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in India and its outcome, informed sources said.

“It is the first full meeting of the Central Committee in nearly 20 months, the longest interval between two plenums as they are officially called in recent decades” Hong Kongbased South China Morning

Post reported.

“The wait, seen by some China-watchers as a delay, has fuelled much speculatio­n about discord within the party, as it grapples with headwinds from a trade war with the United States, slowing economic growth and since this summer a political crisis in Hong Kong.

“But others argue that given the previous plenum was convened ahead of schedule, the meeting this time does not amount to a delay,” it said.

Ahead of the meeting, speculatio­n is rife about the lack of shared views among the top echelon of the party about the crisis faced by China on various fronts.

The Plenary meet which facilitate­s the formulatio­n of key strategies and review of policies in the year is taking place after the annual gathering of top party leaders at the summer sea side resort of Beidaihe in August, which paves the way for informed consultati­ons among them. The focus of the party in recent months remained how to handle the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam, who functioned under the CPC authority, followed a flip-flop policy to deal with the mass protests over the extraditio­n bill which sparked fears among local people that those facing criminal charges could be extradited to the mainland.

In the last 21 weeks, Lam first refused to withdraw the bill and later declared it dead but declined to meet the protestors demand to completely scrap it.

As the agitation increasing­ly turned violent and with the protests continuing, Lam-led local government on Wednesday officially withdrew the bill in the

local legislatur­e in what was seen as a setback to the hardline policy followed by the CPC leadership in handling the protests. The agitation is expected to continue as the protests have now transforme­d into a campaign for greater democratic changes in the former British colony. The protestors, mainly youth, are demanding Lam’s resignatio­n, inquiry into police brutalitie­s and universal franchise of one person one vote with freedom for all the locals to contest the elections for the

local legislatur­e.

Also, the Plenary meeting is taking place as China and the US have broadly agreed over the contours of “phase one” deal to end over yearlong bruising trade war which negatively impacted China’s economy. The world’s second largest economy in the

last several years remained on a slowdown mode.

The phase one deal was expected to be signed next month.

The talks so far were deadlocked as China continued to resist US President Donald Trump’s demand for intrusive verificati­on mechanism to supervise Beijing’s promise for protection of Intellectu­al Property Rights (IPR), technology transfer and more access to American goods to Chinese markets.

Trump kicked off the trade war in June last year demanding China to reduce massive trade deficit which climbed to over USD 539 billion in 2018.

“The point of this plenum is to institutio­nalise the party’s effort to strengthen its absolute and comprehens­ive leadership of the country and society since the 19th party congress,” political analyst Chen Daoyin told the Post.

SEOUL: North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and US President Donald Trump have a “special” relationsh­ip, a top Pyongyang official said Thursday, echoing remarks this week by the American head of state.

Analysts said the comments were an indication Pyongyang still hoped to reach a deal directly with Trump over its nuclear programmes, despite Washington’s longstandi­ng insistence it give up its weapons before sanctions are lifted.

In a statement carried by Pyongyang’s official news agency KCNA, foreign ministry adviser Kim Kye Gwan said he had met the North Korean leader “a few days ago”, and “he said that the relationsh­ip between him and President Trump is special”.

The report came just days after Trump said of Kim: “I like him. He likes me. We get along.

I respect him. He respects me.”

Analysts say the North is looking to exploit the relationsh­ip between Kim and Trump a former real estate mogul who sees himself as a master negotiator - to secure US concession­s in nuclear talks.

It has previously praised Trump’s “extraordin­ary courage” while repeatedly demanding Washington come forward with a “new method” by the end of this year.

Pyongyang understand­s US officials will oppose the lifting of sanctions before denucleari­sation and therefore it wants to “negotiate directly with Trump”, Koh Yu-hwan, a professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University in Seoul, told AFP.

“The North is sending a message that unless Trump makes the call, the talks will fall through and that they are now at a crossroads,” he said.

Adviser Kim told KCNA that Washington policymake­rs were hostile to Pyongyang and “preoccupie­d with the Cold War mentality and ideologica­l prejudice”.

“I sincerely hope that a motive force to overcome all the obstacles... will be provided on the basis of the close relationsh­ip,” he added.

After trading threats of war and insults in 2017, the two leaders held a high-profile summit in Singapore last year, with Kim signing a vague pledge to work towards “denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula”.

But negotiatio­ns stalled after an unsuccessf­ul second summit in Hanoi in February, and earlier this month the North broke off the latest round of working-level talks in Sweden.

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