Manila Bulletin

Flags at half-mast in Beijing as China mourns late premier

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BEIJING, China (AFP) – Flags flew at half-mast in Beijing on Thursday as China prepared for the funeral of late ex-premier Li Keqiang, a reformmind­ed bureaucrat who was once tipped as the country’s future leader but was eclipsed by Xi Jinping.

Li died from a heart attack in Shanghai at just 68 years old last week, less than a year after stepping down as premier.

A career bureaucrat and fluent English speaker, Li’s support for liberaliza­tion and economic reform often drew contrast with the more centralizi­ng and domineerin­g tendencies of Xi’s rule.

But in an official obituary, China’s ruling Communist Party described Xi’s one-time political rival as a “time-tested and loyal communist soldier.”

It also urged the Chinese people to turn “grief into strength” by rallying even closer around the leadership and the party.

In central Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, flags were flying at half-mast early Thursday, AFP journalist­s saw.

State news agency Xinhua reported that flags would fly at half-mast at government buildings across mainland China, as well as in the semi-autonomous regions of Hong Kong and Macau. Li will be cremated later in the day at a ceremony likely to be attended by the country’s top leadership.

His time as premier saw a shift from the more consensusb­ased rule associated with former leaders to the concentrat­ed power of Xi.

And the appointmen­t of Xi ally Li Qiang as his successor was seen as a sign that his reformist agenda had fallen by the wayside as Beijing tightened its grip over the economy. Following his death, trending comments included a quote from Li Keqiang in late 2022, when he insisted that the process of China’s reform and opening up could not be stopped.

“The Yellow River and Yangtze River will not change course,” web users wrote, quoting Li.

Authoritie­s have been on high alert for any hints that public mourning for the reformist could translate into criticism of the current leadership.

 ?? ?? CHINESE PREMIER Li Keqiang (AFP)
CHINESE PREMIER Li Keqiang (AFP)

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