The Borneo Post

In Communist China, it’s a man’s world at the top

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BEIJING: When Xi Jinping warned against ‘ pleasure seeking’ in a stern message to the Communist Party congress last week, the audience included few women and some notable absentees — officials ousted by graft scandals involving illicit affairs.

The scene was a reminder that China’s leadership remains a man’s world, where women have been excluded from the highest echelons of power and men have abused their positions in sex-forfavours scandals.

Women represent only a quarter of the 2,300 delegates attending the week-long congress held just twice a decade, highlighti­ng the yawning gender gap in the world’s most populous nation.

Since the Communists took power in 1949, under Mao Zedong who famously declared that ‘women hold up half the sky’, no woman has ever risen to the top ruling council.

Delegates at the congress will choose members of the party’s Central Committee, where women account for just 4.9 per cent of the 205- strong membership — down from 6.4 per cent in 2012.

The committee then has the task of selecting the 25-person executive Politburo, which currently has only two women, and its elite standing committee — which boasts seven ageing men.

When the new Politburo Standing Committee lineup is unveiled on today or tomorrow, no woman is expected to break the glass ceiling and join them.

Guo Jianmei, a leading lawyer and women’s rights advocate, had prepared a letter to the party congress criticisin­g China’s lack of attention to women’s participat­ion in politics.

“The letter describes this situation but there is no way to submit it, because no party representa­tive is willing to help us,” Guo told AFP.

“China has generally not given any thought on how to promote women’s leadership status.”

Gender equality is enshrined in the constituti­on but analysts say traditiona­l social structures have kept women from gaining more space in politics, pressuring them to prioritise family roles over their careers.

The official All China Women’s Federation coined the derogatory term ‘ leftover women’ in 2007 to describe unmarried profession­als after the government announced a campaign to improve population ‘quality’ by encouragin­g educated women to have babies.

A party congress delegate from Shanghai said she did not see a problem.

“China has already achieved equality between the sexes. The government supports women’s aspiration­s,” she told AFP, declining to give her name.

While women have been left out of top jobs, Xi’s anti- corruption drive has revealed a large number of cases involving men committing adultery, which is against party rules.

“All thinking and behaviour in the vein of pleasure seeking, inaction and sloth, and problem avoidance are unacceptab­le,” he intoned last week, reminding party members to lead by example.

The most prominent figure netted so far in the graft campaign is 74-year- old former security tsar Zhou Yongkang, who was accused of committing adultery with a number of women ‘in power-forsex and money- for- sex trades’. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo shows delegates, some wearing ethnic minority outfits, arriving at the opening of the 19th Communist Party Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. — AFP photo
This file photo shows delegates, some wearing ethnic minority outfits, arriving at the opening of the 19th Communist Party Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. — AFP photo

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