Off the wire
Over 100 mln people exchange mobile "lucky money" for Chinese New Year  • Feature: New York Philharmonic rings in Year of Sheep with concert  • (Sports Focus) '50-50' chance for Beijing's 2022 bid, says Wei Jizhong  • China's holiday box office booms  • Update: Venezuelan gov't condemns killing of teenage protester  • Indian stocks open higher  • Hong Kong stocks close higher by midday  • Tokyo shares rebound higher by break on Yellen's comments  • Australia's Great Barrier Reef under threat from plastic waste  • Feature: Northern Vietnam's pig-killing festival spawns controversial debates  
You are here:   Home/ Editors' Choice

Xi Jinping's passion and composure

china.org.cn / chinagate.cn, February 25, 2015 Adjust font size:

Some analysts view Xi Jinping, the top leader of the Communist Party of China (CPC), as an "idealist". And some say that, while most people in China are busy seeking material benefits, and feel complacent about the increasingly crucial role that China plays in the world, Xi is among the very few Chinese policymakers at the top who has always remained sober-minded. As a matter of fact, idealistic passion is common among those engaged in politics, but a good statesman sets himself apart from others by combining passion with composure. Xi's recent remarks attested to this.

Anyone who keeps an eye on the recent developments in China would know that in 2014, despite the mounting downward pressure on China's economy, the Chinese government and its ruling party still managed to do one thing to the satisfaction of the Chinese people. They launched an anti-corruption campaign in a real sense, which brought down "tigers", or bribe-taking high-ranking military officers and government officials from the height of their powerful positions, and removed "flies", or corrupt petty officials, and brought them to justice. The campaign has gained a lot of support and appreciation from the general public. But in spite of such success, Xi Jinping has kept his mind clear. His analysis and judgment on the issue were beyond people's expectations. He said that China's anti-corruption campaign still faces "grave and complicated challenges", and that "corruption is indeed kept at bay but not yet wiped out, and though the anti-corruption mechanism has been established, it is not a full-fledged one". In one word, he believes that the campaign has fallen short of "an overwhelming victory".

Will there be "an overwhelming victory" in the fight against corruption in 2015? As a matter of fact, this is not Xi's goal. He sees the anti-corruption campaign as "an arduous and protracted war". For him, the most desirable blueprint is "reducing the inventory of corruption, curbing its increase and rebuilding the political ecosystem". To turn this blueprint into reality, Xi said that it is imperative to keep applying high pressure, adopt zero tolerance, and retain the determination and courage to take strong measures, suffer great pains and enforce stringent discipline. He said it is crucial to get to the bottom of each and every case, give teeth to the anti-corruption efforts and form a powerful deterrent. He used a household story from ancient China to make his point. It is a story about a general named Guan Yu, who was once wounded by a poisonous arrow, and without taking an anaesthetic, he had someone cut open his arm and scrape away the poison in his bone to save his life. Xi used this story to illustrate his determination to fight corruption. And a few days after he made those remarks on corruption, a "Military Tiger List" was released, which included the names of 16 corrupt high-ranking military officers–a general, 3 lieutenant generals, 11 major generals and a senior colonel. Due to his earlier experience in the army, Xi feels a strong affinity with the military. But maybe precisely because of his own military experience, he was deeply disappointed and frustrated with the incompetence and corruption of some commanders, and with a lack of coordination, inadequate training and loose discipline in the military after he assumed chairmanship of the CPC Military Commission. He has since taken two very effective measures to rectify the military, namely, scaling up various military exercises, and intensifying the fight against corruption. He told his generals, "We don't do this because we want to pick a fight with someone, but because corruption in the army is synonymous with a failure in the battleground".

1   2