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BEIJING, March 16 (Xinhuanet) -- The National
People's Congress, China's top legislature, picked Wen Jiabao to succeed Zhu
Rongji as the new premier of the State Council, or the "chief executive" of the
Chinese cabinet, here Sunday.
A vice-premier in Premier Zhu's cabinet for five
consecutive years since March 1998, Wen was assigned to take charge of the work
related to agriculture, rural areas, development planning and finance. For his
superb performance in office, he was widely cited as a "pragmatic, prudent and
all-competent leader".
Wen became an alternate member of the Secretariat of
the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and director of the General
Office of the CPC Central Committee at the age of 45. Five years later he was
elected an alternate member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee
and also a member of the Secretariat of the CPC Central Committee. It took just
another five years for him to become a full member of the Political Bureau.
When he just turned 60, Wen entered the Party's top
decision-making body, the nine-person Standing Committee of the Political
Bureau, at the 16th Party Congress held in Beijing four months ago.
As the CPC has, since 1980s, begun the process of
placing more younger and promising officials in its leading positions, Wen, once
a geological engineer, was promoted after having undergone strict selection and
examination.
Born in September 1942 in Tianjin, a coastal city in
north China, Wen graduated from the Beijing Institute of Geology with a master's
degree after eight straight years of study. He then went to the remote Gansu
province in northwest China, and worked in the Provincial Geological Bureau for
15 years. Proceeding from a mere technician and deputy office division chief, he
moved all the way to deputy director of the bureau.
In 1982, Wen was transferred to Beijing, where he
worked in the Ministry of Geology and Mineral Resources as head of the Policy
and Regulations Research Section and then vice-minister.
In 1985, Wen was appointed deputy director of the
General Office of the CPC Central Committee. In the following year, he was
promoted to be director of the General Office, where he stayed for another eight
years. Since 1992, he had served as secretary of the Financial and Economic
Leading Group of the CPC Central Committee for as long as 10 years.กก
กก At a very familiar glimpse of Wen, people often see him clad in a casual
jacket and sneakers, chatting amiably and cordially with local folks and
commoners in villages or disaster-afflicted areas.
As China has a huge rural population of some 900
million, the work related to agriculture and rural areas has always been very
complicated with a range of challenges. As a vice-premier, Wen has successfully
promoted agricultural development and rural economic restructuring, as well as
the experiments with the fee-to-tax reform in the rural areas.
He also played a vital role in mapping out a series
of policy documents concerning rural reforms and development, which include the
Outlined Programs for Poverty Alleviation and Development in China's Rural Areas
and the Outlined Programs for the Development of Agricultural Science and
Technology, both of great importance to the development of Chinese agriculture
in the new century.
As part of its effort to ease the farmers' economic
burden, the Chinese government launched the rural fee-to-tax reform on an
experimental basis in year 2000, and Wen has made painstaking efforts to promote
this reform in the past two years. In order to constantly improve this reform
program, Wen paid many visits to east China's Anhui province, which was selected
to be one of the first experimental bases, and were often seen sitting side by
sidewith the local farmers for heart-to-heart discussions regarding this reform.
By 2002, 20 provinces in China had begun experimenting with this reform,
bringing substantial benefits to hundreds of millions of farmers.
At the on-going First Session of the 10th NPC, Wen
also conferred with legislators from central China's Hubei province on the
fee-to-tax reform. Many of China's ancient imperial dynastieshad also tried to
introduce similar reforms, said Wen, but owing to the restrictions of the social
and political environment at their times, their reforms had all ended in
failure.
"After some initial success, the reforms centuries
ago unexceptionally went to their opposite end and the farmers' economic burden
became even heavier than before," explained Wen. "This was what people called
'the law of Huang Zongxi', named aftera prestigious thinker and philosopher
living more than 300 years ago."
"However, we the Communists will definitely break the
yoke of this law as we always devote ourselves to seeking benefits for the
masses of people whole-heartedly," said Wen in an affirming voice,drawing
enthusiastic applause from all lawmakers present.
Wen is famed for his in-depth, down-to-earth
style of work. After holding leading positions in central authorities, he has
trekked to almost every part of the country, leaving his footprints behind in
more than 1,800 of China's total 2,000-strong counties. Apart from frequently
going to villages and even to the cropfields to acquaint himself with the actual
situation of agriculture, rural development and the farmers' life, it has also
almost become an annual routine for him to go to areas hit by floods, droughts
and other natural disasters, to direct rescue and relief missions and comfort
disaster-affected people.
During this year's Spring Festival, or the Chinese
Lunar New Year which is a traditional occasion for family reunions, Wen went to
Fuxin Coalmine in northeastern Liaoning province to send season's greetings to
the miners on behalf of the central leadership. The state-owned mine is
currently in its difficult stage of restructuring process.
On the eve of the Spring Festival, which fell on
January 31, Wen went down to the bottom of a working shaft 720 meters under the
ground, chatted with miners and sat together with them on coal-shipping tracks,
eating Chinese dumplings as New Year celebrations.
Sources close to him say that the sober-minded Wen is
a very thoughtful and considerate person, but he is also agile and resolute
while making decisions. In 1998, when many regions along the Yangtze River,
China's longest, were menaced by a monstrous deluge unseen for a hundred years,
Wen was entrusted by central authorities to stay in the forefront and direct all
flood-fighting efforts.
The situation went extremely grave as the sixth flood
crest of the Yangtze arrived. After inspecting endangered sections of the
embankment, hearing reports from various sectors and soliciting opinions of
meteorological and water conservancy experts in detail, Wen had made quick
decisions and appropriate, meticulous arrangements which saved the people's
lives and their property andled to the eventual victory against the floods.
Following the outbreak of the Asian Financial Crisis,
Wen also did a lot of effective work in carrying out in-depth financial reforms,
regulating financial order as well as preventing and minimizing financial risks.
These efforts contributed tremendously to China's success in coping with the
Asian Financial Crisis and exercising a pro-active fiscal policy to support the
national economic growth.
At a series of recent meetings which aimed to map out
the course for China's social and economic development in the future, Wen also
had made noticeable performances: while presiding over the Central Economic Work
Conference, he urged the nation to maintain a steady economic growth, speed up
economic restructuring, further push forward reform and opening-up and improve
the socialist market economic system; at the Central Conference on Work in Rural
Areas, he made arrangements for the work related to agricultural and rural
development, calling for accelerated efforts to build up well-off rural areas
and stressing a well-planned and balanced economic and social development for
both the cities and the countryside.
He is also in charge of a new round of institutional
reform of the government organs, and has set forth the principle of "cutting
personnel, raising efficiency and unifying thinking". He prompted governments at
all levels to transform their functions, introduce a democratic and scientific
decision-making mechanism, always keep to administration by law and subject
themselves to the supervision by the people.
A very knowledgeable person, Wen has a solid command
of political and economic theories and profound attainments in natural sciences.
While serving in the CPC Central Committee, he was the main drafter of some
key-note documents of the Party, such as the Decisions on Certain Issues
Regarding the Establishment of a Socialist Market Economic System and the
proposals on formulating the country's 9th and 10th Five-Year Plans.
In diplomatic and foreign exchange activities, Wen
has also left people a deep impression with his steady and prudent manner and
being well-versed in world affairs.
Almost everyone who knows or ever met him would come
to the same appraisal: he really cherishes deep affections for the people.
Wen and his wife have a son and a daughter. Enditem
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