The Manila Times

Historic meeting lauds lifetime power for Xi

- AFP PHOTO AFP

BEIJING: Thousands of Chinese legislator­s erupted into enthusiast­ic applause on Monday over plans to give President Xi Jinping a lifetime mandate to mould the Asian giant into a global superpower.

China’s rubber- stamp parliament met in the imposing Great Hall of the People for an annual session that will make Xi the most powerful leader since Mao Zedong, concentrat­ing the growing might of the military, economy and state in the hands of one man.

As Xi looked on from a stage dominated by mostly male party leaders in dark suits, a constituti­onal amendment to scrap the two-term limit for the presidency was read out to the chamber, prompting fervent applause.

The legislator­s are all but certain to approve the amendment this Sunday, as the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leadership sets the agenda for the National People’s Congress (NPC).

The text says the change “will be conducive to safeguardi­ng the of the CCP Central Committee with Comrade Xi Jinping as the core and to strengthen­ing and perfecting the national leadership system.”

The amendment was presented after Premier Li Keqiang delivered a report warning that the country is

The government set an economic growth target of around 6.5 percent for 2018, in line with expectatio­ns but lower than the 6.9 percent GDP increase in 2017.

It announced an 8.1 percent increase for the defense budget to 1.11 trillion yuan ($175 billion) this year, giving the world’s largest armed forces a boost after spending growth slowed

Delegates applaud as Chinese President Xi Jinping (left) and Premier Li Keqiang arrive for the opening session of the National People’s Congress, China’s legislatur­e, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Monday. in the previous two years.

The report also warned Taiwan that China “will never tolerate any separatist schemes” amid tensions between the mainland and the selfruled island.

But the spotlight was squarely on the party’s most powerful leader in more than four decades.

‘Unify leadership’

Lifting term limits would allow the 64-year-old leader to stay on as party chief, head of the military and president beyond 2023, when his second term is due to end.

“I support Xi Jinping. I support the constituti­on change,” Zhou Feng, a delegate from Shanghai, told Agence France-Presse.

Another delegate from central Henan province said “Xi Jinping is great,” but several other legislator­s refused to answer questions about the amendment.

Censors have worked furiously to stamp out dissenting voices on words from “disagree” to “emperor” on the Twitter-like Weibo website in recent days.

On Monday, some Weibo users as “shall we say, long live the king?” or “history will judge him harshly.”

State media outlets masked the comments sections on the stories they posted about the amendment on Weibo on Monday.

Analysts have warned that the move carries risks as it ends a “collective” model of leadership that maintained stability after Mao’s chaotic reign from 1949 to his death in 1976.

NPC spokesman Zhang Yesui has on Sunday it would merely align the presidency with the titles of Communist Party general secretary and Military Commission chairman, which do not have term limits.

The amendment says that opinions had been sought at the “grassroots level” and that “the masses, party members and cadres in many regions” had “unanimousl­y called” for the revision of term limits.

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