China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Gray hair comes early for grassroots official

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

A photo of a hardworkin­g grassroots official in Yunnan province drew attention online over the weekend because it showed him with gray hair — which was surprising at age 38.

Li Zhongkai is Party chief of an impoverish­ed village in Dayao county, Chuxiong Yi autonomous prefecture, where he has been working in poverty relief for six years. He was recently honored for his performanc­e.

County officials have been striving to remove the poverty label, and it’s common for them to stay up late or have meals at irregular hours, which could have contribute­d to his gray hair, Li said.

“Most grassroots officials work extra hours to get the job done, and I do not deserve the special attention,” he said in an interview with China National Radio.

Li became a topic of discussion online after the local Party organizati­on department released a list of nominees for government positions.

Li’s photo, showing wrinkles and gray hair, made him seem much older than a person born in 1980 — the year listed on his resume.

The drastic contrast led some to believe Li had tampered with his personal data to advance his career.

But the prefecture govern- ment said it had confirmed its authentici­ty.

Li lamented to the radio network that he “was indeed born in 1980, and I don’t remember when my hair turned gray”.

The photo was taken on Tuesday, and he had been in a hurry and hadn’t had time to groom himself beforehand, he said.

“I took the photo at a studio at the county seat because I was filling in forms that required a profile photo,” he said.

One social media user commented that appearance has no direct link to workloads, and people with an easy job do not necessaril­y look younger.

But Yuan Lingqing, an endocrine and metabolic diseases doctor in Changsha, Hunan province, told Chinese Business View that Li’s gray hair is abnormal and could be a result of longterm anxiety, exhaustion and a resulting endocrine disorder.

“And exposure to extreme weather has accelerate­d the aging of his skin,” Yuan said.

China has pledged to eradicate extreme poverty domestical­ly by the end of 2020.

A total of 125 counties have had their poverty labels removed since the start of last year, according to the central government.

A netizen said he had been in contact with some grassroots officials during a research project, and found that many were respectabl­e and dedicated, and working for meager wages.

 ??  ?? Li Zhongkai
Li Zhongkai

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