Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions
2007
BEIJING, March 15 (Xinhua) -- Chinese legislators and
political advisors, who also act as farmers, factory workers, village officials
and residential committee heads, are bringing their motions and proposals
concerning the immediate interests of the public to the ongoing "two sessions"
in Beijing.
"The problems we have brought forth are quite simple
and common but they are really happening around us," said Chen Xueying, a
lawmaker from Huizhou City, south China's Guangdong Province, having promised to
take grassroots voices to Beijing.
Chen, who left her rural hometown 21 years ago to do
a temporary job in the southern city, is now a workshop director andhas been a
deputy to the country's top legislature for nearly ten years.
The "two sessions" refer to the once-a-year full
conferences of the National People's Congress (NPC), China's parliament, and the
National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
(CPPCC), the country's top advisory body.
Chen and some other NPC deputies jointly submitted a
suggestion demanding the country's "big four" commercial banks to stop
collecting inquiry fees (about 30 cents for each service).
"Although the sum is small, it's really a big deal
for commoners like farmers and workers," said Chen, adding she will put forward
any problem concerning public interests to the top legislature, no matter how
small it is.
Like most national lawmakers, Chen has made a
thorough research and investigation by visiting neighborhoods and talking to
individuals living in his precinct before submitting motions or suggestions to
the top legislature. She usually brings possible solutions back after the "two
sessions."
NPC deputies at various levels are key channels
transmitting grassroots voices, and an effective reflection of local opinions
and problems, said Jiang Hongbin, a lawmaker from China's northeastern province
of Heilongjiang.
"A sound development of grassroots democracy offers
fundamental nutrition to the country's overall democratic situation," he said.
"Residential and village committees produce the
China-style grassroots democracy as the problems with immediate concerns to the
public can be effectively resolved," Jiang said, adding the two sessions this
year put more emphasis on grassroots problems, which have been brought forth by
grassroots deputies who keenly understand public concerns.
For instance, Jiang said, if an NPC deputy wants to
reveal the real situation of agriculture to the top legislature, she or he
visits farming households and collect their opinions.
"It's an entire chain linking people's aspirations,
national targets and lawmakers' responsibilities," Jiang said.
In Luonan Village of Foshan City, Guangdong Province,
villagers regularly cast their votes to elect members of the village committee
or deputies to local people's congress at township or county levels, after
listening to candidates' campaign speeches.
"Villagers are enthusiastic about choosing those who
can fully represent them," said Guan Runyao, director of the Luonan Village
Committee.
The central government is striving to spread such
democracy in villages across the country. In some poor villages, people only
gather in the backyard of the village head, sit on the stools theybring with
them from their homes, and talk or debate for hours about village affairs until
they find a solution.
"Each progressive step of grassroots democracy can have
some impact on higher levels of political life, and finally reaches the top and
influences the country's political landscape," said Liu Laiping, an NPC deputy
and a judge from Guangdong.
By Xinhua writers Li Huizi, Wei Wu and Qiu Lin