Related: Hu Jintao
reelected Chinese president
Related: Wu Bangguo
reelected chairman of NPC Standing Committee
Related: Wen Jiabao
approved by parliament to be Chinese premier
Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions 2008
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The seventh plenary meeting of the First
Session of the 11th National People's Congress (NPC) is held at the Great
Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, March 17, 2008. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, March 17 (Xinhua) -- China's parliament on
Monday approved Premier Wen Jiabao's nomination of a new Cabinet, including five
"super ministers" who are put on the frontline of a major government reshuffle.
The "super ministers" include minister of industry
and information Li Yizhong, minister of transport Li Shenglin, minister of human
resources and social security Yin Weimin, minister of environmental protection
Zhou Shengxian and minister of housing and urban-rural construction Jiang
Weixin.
"From this lineup, we can see the new requirements on
the Cabinet ministers, set by the current social and economic development:
capacities in strategic thinking and policy-making, administration and overall
coordination," said Chi Fulin, executive president of the China Institute for
Reform and Development.
Li Yizhong is widely known as former head of State
Administration of Work Safety and a seasoned professional in petrochemical
industries and state assets management. Li Shenglin has worked in factories and
served as Mayor of Tianjin before he became vice-minister in charge of the
former State Economic and Trade Commission and later, vice-minister in charge of
the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC).
New minister of environmental protection Zhou
Shengxian used to work in China's northwest, a region of adverse environmental
and natural conditions. He served as director of the State Forestry
Administration and the State Environmental Protection Administration
respectively before Monday's nomination.
The new minister of human resources and social
security Yin Weimin is a master of economics, and Jiang Weixin worked in the
real estate sector and served as vice-minister in charge of the NDRC.
The current government reshuffle is expected to
address focal issues in China's economic and social development, and to seek
all-round, coordinated and sustainable development, said Prof. Li Junpeng of the
National School of Administration. "The 'super ministers' therefore need to be
enterprising and innovative."
Observers say the reshuffle is more an exploration of
China's overall administrative reform, rather than a simple downsizing. The
performance of the new government is also crucial to China's future development.
In comparison with the previous Cabinet consisting
largely of technocrats, most of the 35 new Cabinet members are well-grounded in
their specialties including economics, law, political science, agriculture,
administration, science and philosophy.
At least five of them hold doctoral degrees,
including Commerce Minister Chen Deming, Health Minister Chen Zhu, Foreign
Minister Yang Jiechi, minister of agriculture Sun Zhengcai and minister in
charge of the State Population and Family Planning Commission Li Bin.
Some of the ministers studied overseas: Foreign
Minister Yang Jiechi at London School of Economics and Political Science, and
Minister of Education Zhou Ji at State University of New York.
The two non-Communist ministers, Chen Zhu and
Minister of Science and Technology Wan Gang, were trained in France and Germany
respectively.
"Their profound experience will help them stand firm
in the process of reform and opening up, remain cool-headed and make practical
judgments in complicated situations," said Prof. Li Junpeng.
More than 10 ministers were born after New China was
founded in1949 and witnessed the country's impoverished and unrestful past, and
the momentous changes in the 30 years of reform and opening up.
Many of the new Cabinet members, including Premier
Wen Jiabao, had worked as farmers or workers or in other grass-roots posts.
"They share similar experiences: they suffered the
worst natural calamity in recent decades in the early 1960s, and their avid
desire for knowledge was dampened by the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976)," said
Wang Ronghua, president of Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.
Analysts say the coming five years will be a crucial
period for China to implement the "Scientific Outlook on Development", and
maintain sustained and balanced growth.
"The public is watching how the new Cabinet will
boost sustainable development by transforming the economic growth pattern,
provide basic and secure public services to promote social harmony, and deepen
political reforms through administrative restructuring," said Chi Fulin.