Farmers electing village leaders themselves is no longer a problem
in the country's most rural areas, but supervising their work and
the operation of village committees can be awkward.
A
national coordination group on villagers' self-governance has
pledged to help give farmers more say in decision-making and
encouraged voters to actively supervise the actions of the leaders
they selected.
As
an integral part of their community's autonomy, the creation and
implementation of democratic decision-making processes, management
and supervision still lag far behind the establishment of
democratic elections, Zhang Mingliang, director of the Department
of Construction of Basic-level Government and Community under the
Ministry of Civil Affairs, said Tuesday in Beijing.
Often, "the will of the people is not fully reflected by village
committees' decisions, while some committee members tend to forget
their responsibility of exercising legal power for those who
elected them,'' Zhang said at the second meeting of the
coordination group.
The group, established last June by several ministries and
institutions, has focused on promoting grass roots democracy and
supervising the actions of village leaders.
Tuesday, the group promised to enhance supervision of village
committees and to make more inspections of villagers'
self-governing processes this year.
"The elected leaders risk losing their posts if they do not
properly represent their people,'' Zhang said.
Late last year, a village head in Wuyi Village of Changsha, Central
China's Hunan Province, was recalled by local residents after he
allegedly sought personal gain by taking advantage of his
position.
Auditing officials checked the committee's revenue accounts and
found many muddled transactions.
Local farmers have called for more transparency of the village
committee's work.
Chinese farmers have shown great enthusiasm in assuming their
political rights, with an average turnout of above 90 percent in
village committee elections, said Li Xueju, minister of civil
affairs.
The Organic Law of Villagers' Committees has been effective for
five years now, and a standard direct election system has been
formed in most Chinese villages, Li said.
However, Li indicated that "if ordinary people cannot have a say in
their village's decision-making, any efforts to promote the
building of democracy will fall short."
(China Daily February 11, 2004)
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