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VP impresses with maiden speech
BEIJING—The public debut of
China’s newly appointed Vice-Premier Li Keqiang impressed his audience
yesterday as he set out his policy visions for the first time.
The top leader demonstrated his keen awareness of the challenges ahead
for the country, devoting nearly half of his first public speech in the
post to analyzing major economic and social issues. Addressing the 2008
China Development Forum, Li said that, despite the challenges facing
both the global and Chinese economies, the nation’s rapid urbanization
and industrialization and its huge domestic market can combine to ensure
the country maintains fast and sustainable economic growth.
It was his first public appearance since his appointment as one of the
country’s four vice-premiers, which was endorsed last Monday by the
National People’s Congress. “We will still firmly adhere to the central
task of economic development as China remains in the early stage of its
development with a huge population to feed.
Yet, the vice-premier vowed that more efforts would be devoted to
improving sectors attracting the most public concern, including
healthcare, housing, employment and social security. At 53, Li is the
youngest member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the
Communist Party of China Central Committee.
After 30 years of reform and opening, Li said, China has come to the
point of tackling the most important issues, with breakthroughs to be
made in key sectors. In his 16-minute speech, Li addressed the audience
with frequent eye contact and made a swift transition between topics. Li
cut his teeth as a village Party chief in his native Anhui province, and
later served as an official in the Communist Youth League of China from
1983 to 1998. He spent six-and-a-half years as governor of the country’s
most populous and agricultural province of Henan in central China,
ensuring the first double-digit growth in GDP and in the per capita net
income of farmers in this inland province in 2004.
He also became the youngest provincial Party chief when he moved on to
the old northeastern industrial hub of Liaoning in 2004. He helped to
revive this rust-belt province with efforts to push forward the opening
of its coastal cities, create jobs and provide better housing. Haruhiko
Kuroda, president of Asian Development Bank, said: “I was impressed by
his frankness, and his faithful and spontaneous statements made at the
forum.
—Xinhua |