The Star Malaysia

Xi to extend rule

Without an heir apparent, China moves to lift presidenti­al term limits

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China proposes scrapping term limits for its president.

BEIJING: Xi Jinping, China’s most powerful leader for decades, could stay in office indefinite­ly after the Communist Party called for the removal of presidenti­al term limits.

Xi, who is also party chief and seen as the country’s most formidable ruler since Mao Zedong, has been president since 2013 and the 64-year-old leader would have to step down in 2023 under the current system.

But the party’s Central Committee proposed deleting from the constituti­on the stipulatio­n that a president “shall serve no more than two consecutiv­e terms” of five years, the official Xinhua news agency reported yesterday.

“I think he will become emperor for life and the Mao Zedong of the 21st century”, Willy Lam, politics professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said.

“If his health permits, he wants to serve 20 years, which would mean until 2032 as secretary-general of the party, and 2033 as state president,” Lam said.

The proposed change, which would also apply to the vice-president, will be submitted to legislator­s at the annual full session of the rubber-stamp National People’s Congress starting March 5.

Xi has been chipping away at the collective model of leadership that was promoted by Deng Xiaoping, the architect of the country’s economic reforms in the 1980s.

Xi’s two predecesso­rs, Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao, both served two five-year terms, but he has signalled bigger ambitions.

At the 19th five-yearly party congress last October, the party unveiled a new seven-member Standing Committee – its top ruling body – that lacked any clear heir apparent to Xi.

Xi also saw his eponymous political philosophy – Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteri­stics for a New Era – included in the party’s charter, an honour only accorded to one previous leader, Mao, during his lifetime.

The Central Committee also proposed adding Xi’s “thought” to the national constituti­on, joining Mao again.

Since taking over as party general-secretary in late 2012, Xi has waged a remorseles­s battle against corruption, which has seen more than one million people punished.

Some see the campaign also as a means for him to eradicate internal opposition.

A major outcome of the 19th Party Congress was the decision to establish a new anti-graft agency, the National Supervisor­y Commission, that will coordinate investigat­ions at all levels of government and expand its remit to include non-party members.

The Central Committee proposed listing the commission as a new state organ in the constituti­on.

Xi told party officials on Saturday that the constituti­on was key to building a moderately prosperous society, building a modern socialist country and realising the “Chinese dream of national rejuvenati­on” – his slogan to restore the nation to its former glory.

“No organisati­on or individual has the privilege to overstep the constituti­on or the law,” Xinhua quoted him as saying.

Xi is keeping a key ally by his side as he cements power.

The feared former head of the anti-graft agency, Wang Qishan, stepped down from the Standing Committee last October because at 69, he had reached the traditiona­l retirement age.

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