NANCHANG, Aug.7 (Xinhua) -- Wearing bamboo hats and drab grey uniforms with
rice bags slung across their shoulders, a group of men and women trudge along a
narrow mountain path under the scorching sun, their clothes soaked in sweat.
It looks like a scene from China's wartime past in the first half of last
century or a re-enactment for a film.
But it is in fact the Communist Party of China's (CPC) latest team-building
and motivational course for senior government officials. It also has the wider
purpose of discouraging corruption and arrogance before they start.
The course is run by the China Executive Leadership Academy at Jinggangshan
(CELAJ), one of the three high-profile CPC cadre training institutes. The other
two are based in Pudong, in Shanghai, and Yan'an, in northwest China's Shaanxi
Province.
Carrying grain along the 4.8-km path where Mao Zedong and Zhu De, founders
of Chinese military, once passed from the foot of Mount Jinggang to the top is
one of the many missions newcomers are required to fulfil, says Li Xiaosan,
CELAJ deputy president.
"It is no easy task to climb the mountain," says trainee Xie Jun, deputy
director of the Certification and Accreditation Administration of China.
"I used a tree branch as a walking stick. When I eventually made it to the
top, my clothes were soaked with sweat.
"The exercise has expelled our excitement as newcomers, and we now feel a
bit more reverence for our revolutionary forerunners," says Xie.
In accordance with guidelines for training cadres, who are also members of
the Communist Party of China (CPC), the government will be organizing about
110,000 CPC officials, including 500 ministerial cadres, for study camps each
year until 2010.
CELAJ deputy president Li Xiaoshan says, "CPC cadres are getting younger
and younger, and they mainly comprise people born in 1950s or 1960s and were
hired as government employees in 1970s and 1980s.
"These people are intelligent and well-educated, but some lack systematic
study of CPC history and fail to fully understand the strong bond between the
Party and the broad masses," says Li. "We must organize their study of
revolutionary traditions and theories."
The three cadre training institutes were established after the Party's 16th
National Congress to improve the standards and skills of leading CPC cadres and
conduct international training exchanges.
Officially their aims to educate CPC officials through experience-based
courses and motivate them by learning more about the history of China,
especially that of the Communist Party of China; to teach them to perform their
duties as civil servants and help prevent corruption; to restore humility in the
CPC cadres.
Pudong is regarded as a vanguard of China's economic development, while
Jinggangshan and Yan'an were both important revolutionary strongholds.
The Pudong-based institute runs courses on international affairs, and helps
trainees keep pace with developments and become more open. The other two
institutes give officials the opportunity to learn more about revolutionary
traditions and about conditions in the country. Training is carried out in the
forms of lectures, discussions, and field study.
Since their establishment, the institutes have trained more than 20,000 CPC
leading cadres; the CELAJ has trained 9,225 top and middle level CPC cadres.
"Apart from building more than 100 centers for investigative studies on the
basis of revered revolutionary sites, swathes of farmland, exemplary households
of ordinary citizens, industrial parks and financial organizations, China is
planning to base some of its training grounds overseas through improved
international cooperation," says Li.
One of the most important fields of study are various theories regarding
the construction of socialism with Chinese characteristics, alongside knowledge
of modern economics and management expertise.
Other organizations or sectors have set up centers of their own, or
entrusted universities to help train CPC leading cadres at lower levels or even
ordinary CPC members.
In the run-up to the Party's 17th National Congress in Beijing in the
second half this year, the Party schools and cadre training institutes are
preparing new training targets.
Zeng Qinghong, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau
of the CPC Central Committee, visited the institutes in May.
Zeng said new programs to train leading CPC cadres would be launched after
the Party's 17th National Congress.
Zhao Changmao, deputy head of the organization section at the Party School
of the CPC Central Committee, insisted innovative achievements in CPC theory
would be the core of the new training program.