The Philippine Star

China Premier Li bows out

As Xi loyalists take reins

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BEIJING (AP) – After a decade in Chinese President Xi Jinping’s shadow, Li Keqiang is taking his final bow as the country’s premier, marking a shift away from the skilled technocrat­s who have helped steer the world’s secondbigg­est economy in favor of officials known mainly for their unquestion­ed loyalty to China’s most powerful leader in recent history.

After exiting the ruling Communist Party’s all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee in October – despite being below retirement age – Li’s last major task was delivering the state of the nation address to the rubber-stamp parliament yesterday.

The report sought to reassure citizens of the resiliency of the Chinese economy, but contained little that was new.

Once seen as a potential top leader, Li was increasing­ly sidelined as Xi accumulate­d ever-greater powers and elevated the military and security services in aid of the “great rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation.”

Li’s lack of visibility sometimes made it difficult to remember he was technicall­y ranked No. 2 in party.

Li “was a premier largely kept out of the limelight by order of the boss,” said Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at the London University School of Oriental and African Studies and a longtime observer of Chinese politics.

In an era where personal loyalty trumps all, the fact that Li wasn’t seen purely as a Xi loyalist may end up being “the main reason why he will be remembered fondly,” Tsang said.

For most of his career, Li was known as a cautious, capable and highly intelligen­t bureaucrat who rose through, and was bound by, a consensus-oriented Communist Party that reflexivel­y stifles dissent.

As governor and then party secretary of the densely populated agricultur­al province of Henan in the 1990s, Li squelched reporting on an AIDS outbreak tied to illegal blood-buying rings that pooled plasma and re-injected it into donors after removing the blood products, allegedly with the collusion of local officials.

While Li was not in office when the scandal broke, his administra­tion worked to quiet it up, prevented victims from seeking redress and harassed private citizens working on behalf of orphans and others affected.

But Li also cut a modestly different profile, an English speaker from a generation of politician­s schooled during a time of greater openness to liberal Western ideas.

Introduced to politics during the chaotic 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, he made it into prestigiou­s Peking University, where he studied law and economics, on his own merits rather than through political connection­s.

After graduation, Li went to work at the Communist Youth League, an organizati­on that grooms university students for party roles, then headed by future president and party leader Hu Jintao. Higher office soon followed.

 ?? AP ?? Chinese Premier Li Keqiang bows before delivering his state of the nation address at the opening session of China’s National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Sunday.
AP Chinese Premier Li Keqiang bows before delivering his state of the nation address at the opening session of China’s National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Sunday.

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