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Sidelined official sparks China leadership speculation
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Feb 9, 2012


The United States said Thursday a senior Chinese official rumoured to have tried to defect had visited one of its consulates, fuelling a political intrigue analysts say may signal a power struggle in China.

The speculation about Wang Lijun, who has close links to a high-profile contender to join China's top decision-making body, comes at a crucial time ahead of a once-in-a-decade leadership transition that starts later this year.

The US embassy in Beijing declined to comment on the rumours that Wang had sought asylum, saying only that he had gone to the consulate in Chengdu for a meeting and left "of his own volition".

But analysts said confirmation of the visit would further fuel the speculation surrounding Wang and his boss, Chongqing's colourful but controversial Communist Party secretary Bo Xilai.

They said it may hamper Bo's chances of promotion to the nine-member Politburo Standing Committee, China's top decision-making body, when seven members, including President Hu Jintao, step down later this year.

As Bo's deputy, Wang -- whose current whereabouts are unknown -- won a reputation for graft-busting with a campaign to rid the southwestern city of corruption in which dozens of officials were arrested.

But Chongqing authorities removed him as police chief last week before announcing Wednesday he was on leave and receiving "vacation-style treatment" for stress and over-work.

"Wang's dismissal is most likely the result of high-level in-fighting," Willy Lam, a leading China expert at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told AFP.

"Bo's chances for the (Politburo appointment) have been adversely affected. It's long-standing 'organisational principle' of the CCP (Communist Party) that a region's No. 1 has to take political responsibility for the misdemeanors of his subordinates."

Sick leave is a term often used as a euphemism for a political purge in China's murky one-party communist system.

China's Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai refused to comment Thursday on Wang's visit to the US consulate, only telling reporters the issue had been resolved "relatively smoothly."

The Chongqing government also refused to comment on the visit, which came ahead of a planned trip to the United States next week by Xi Jinping, China's vice president and likely successor to President Hu Jintao.

But there was feverish speculation about Wang's motives -- and his current whereabouts -- on China's popular microblogs.

The state-run Global Times newspaper said a government statement on Wang's illness was forwarded online 30,000 times within an hour of being posted, reflecting intense interest in the nation's high-level internal politics.

While state media has not reported that Wang visited the US consulate in Chengdu, information was circulating widely on microblogs Thursday, a day after Internet censors blocked searches and content containing Wang's name.

The rumours that Wang was seeking political asylum appear to have been fuelled by reports that scores of police vehicles descended on the consulate on Tuesday evening.

As Bo's right-hand man, Wang, 52, an ethnic Mongolian, gained national fame while toppling former city deputy police chief Wen Qiang in a massive crime crackdown. Wen was executed in 2010.

Known as a "princeling" due to his father's revolutionary legacy, Bo has encountered opposition from those who are against nepotism and hereditary rights in China's political system.

Bo's crackdown on corruption in Chongqing was widely popular, although responses to his campaign to instil "red" or communist-style patriotism in the municipality were mixed.

On Thursday, the Chongqing Daily, the city's official newspaper, championed the crackdown on the mafia, saying nearly 97 percent of the city's residents said they "had a sense of safety" and "no longer feared going out".

"Bo is seen as a Machiavellian figure who is willing to risk anything to achieve his goals," Lam said.

"His high-profile campaign to sing red songs and crack down on triads are regarded as cynical ploys to boost his own political standing."

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China city mulls banning endless official speeches
Beijing (AFP) Feb 9, 2012 - Long-winded politicians in China's southern metropolis of Guangzhou may find themselves reined in as city officials consider restricting the length of interminable speeches.

Wan Qingliang, the city's mayor, has put forward a proposal that will require officials to limit their speeches to under an hour at key meetings and less than 30 minutes in less important gatherings, a media report said.

"I have already set an example myself by finishing my speech at 58 minutes," Wan was quoted as saying by the Guangzhou Daily.

Chinese officials often makes speeches that go on for hours, delivered in a monotone, and audience members are sometimes caught dozing off, even in big events broadcast live on the nation's state television CCTV.

An opinion piece published in the state-run Global Times newspaper in 2009 titled "Why are Chinese speeches so boring?" lamented the "dearth of public speech capability" and said it showed a lack of charisma among officials.

It said the cause was a lack of training in schools, adding that "the 'official' way of giving speeches -- sitting tight and square and sounding lofty and serious -- has become a nationwide speech technique by default."

Wan's proposal has reportedly garnered a lot of interest.

"In many cases, we discuss issues in a bored and tired state due to those lengthy speeches and there isn't much time left to make decisions," Tang Jinhua, head of the city's agricultural bureau, was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua news agency.

He also proposed reducing the amount of unnecessary paperwork used in meetings.

"Some documents are not needed at all and we just throw them away after reading the titles," he said.



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Singapore warns US on anti-China rhetoric
Washington (AFP) Feb 8, 2012
Singapore on Wednesday urged the United States to be careful in comments on China, warning that suggestions of a strategy to contain the rising power could cause strife in Asia. On a visit to Washington, Foreign Minister K. Shanmugam voiced confidence that the State Department accepted the need for cooperation with China but said that US domestic politics "resulted in some anti-China rhetori ... read more


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