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China's Communist Party Congress opens with a warning

As China's once-in-a-decade leadership transition got under way, outgoing President Hu Jintao warned bluntly that the Communist Party faces 'collapse' if it fails to clean up corruption. 

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Lee Jin-man/AP
Chinese President Hu Jintao addresses the opening session of the 18th Communist Party Congress held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, Thursday, Nov. 8, 2012. China's ruling Communist Party opened a congress Thursday to usher in a new group of younger leaders faced with the challenging tasks of righting a flagging economy and meeting public calls for better government.

Outgoing Chinese leader Hu Jintao opened the Communist Party鈥檚 18th聽Congress here Thursday with a wide-ranging speech surveying the achievements of his decade in office, but denying succor to those hoping for democratic reform.

In an address full of platitudes and generalities, Mr. Hu insisted on the Communist Party鈥檚 right to rule China. But in unusually blunt language he warned that corruption could destroy it.

The 90-minute speech offered no hint of a change in government direction as Hu hands power to the next generation of Communist Party leaders, after 10 years that have seen remarkable economic growth but no significant political opening.

鈥淭here were no surprises,鈥 says Wen Yunchao, a commentator with Sun Political Affairs Weekly in Hong Kong. 鈥淲e鈥檝e heard 99.5 percent of it before.鈥

Hu鈥檚 address in the cavernous Great Hall of the People to 2,268 congress delegates was a classic piece of traditional Communist Party theater. Standing at a heavy, flower-bedecked lectern in front of a giant hammer and sickle, the stage backdrop hung with red drapes, Hu spoke in his characteristically wooden style, his face unsmiling and his delivery flat. Every now and again, the assembled delegates would break into short bursts of dutiful applause.

The most dramatic moment came when he raised his voice to warn that growing public anger at official corruption 鈥渃ould prove fatal to the party, and even cause the collapse of the party and the fall of the state.鈥 He urged 鈥渦nremitting efforts to combat corruption,鈥 which has poisoned almost every level of official Chinese life.

More of the same?

Critics doubt, however, whether his words will mean much in practice, not least because Prime Minister Wen Jiabao has made similar comments on many occasions, to little effect.

鈥淚 have no confidence in his anticorruption comments because he said nothing about institutional reform, nor about opening up the media and allowing freedom of speech鈥 that might help unveil corruption, says Mr. Wen, the聽commentator based in Hong Kong.

鈥淭he elites know that anticorruption drives cannot be enforced unless there is political reform, and since they do not expect that, they know that anticorruption is just a slogan,鈥 adds Yao Bo, writer of one of China鈥檚 most popular political blogs.

Though Hu called on the party to 鈥渕ake both active and prudent efforts to carry out reform of the political structure,鈥 the language he used was similar to earlier exhortations that have come to naught, says Qian Gang, director of the China Media Project at Hong Kong University, who closely analyzes the texts of official speeches.

鈥淧eople who have been expecting political reform in China will be disappointed by this speech,鈥 says Mr. Qian. 鈥淭here was nothing new, and there seem to be a lot of obstacles to reform鈥 thrown up by powerful conservative factions within the Communist Party.

Hu clearly signaled that the party is not ready for any serious experiments in democracy, declaring that although 鈥渨e do not follow the old rigid and closed path, nor do we take the evil way of changing flags and banners.鈥

鈥淲e will never copy a Western political system,鈥 he added later.

China's ambitious economic goals

On the economic front, Hu set the ambitious goal of doubling China's per capita income by 2020, and reiterated the government鈥檚 intention of reorienting China鈥檚 growth policy away from reliance on exports and investment in giant projects, and toward household consumption.

He also repeated official calls for deeper reform of the financial system and of state-owned enterprises 鈥 reforms that foreign and domestic economists have been recommending for some time but which have yet to occur. In a hint that the government is prepared to make changes, Hu urged that 鈥渨e should follow more closely the rules of the market and better play the role of the government.鈥

Most of the goals he set were vague, such as 鈥渃ontinue to release and develop the productive forces,鈥 or 鈥渟afeguard social fairness and justice.鈥

Shortcomings of the party

But Hu was more precise when he acknowledged shortcomings in the party鈥檚 stewardship, warning that 鈥渦nbalanced, uncoordinated, and unsustainable development remains a big problem.鈥 He also admitted that 鈥渟ocial problems have increased markedly鈥 in recent years, pointing to education, health care, housing, food safety, and the administration of justice as flash points, along with 鈥渁 lack of ethics and integrity in some fields of endeavor.鈥

He had strong words, too, for party officials who set themselves above the law. In what seemed to be a swipe at Bo Xilai, the former top party official who is now facing trial on charges of corruption, obstruction of justice and possibly involvement in the murder of a British businessman, Hu insisted that 鈥渘o organization or individual has the privilege of overstepping the Constitution and the law.鈥

None of this impressed Zhang Lifan, a prominent historian and independent political commentator in Beijing. 鈥淭here were a lot of empty promises in what he said, but I heard nothing practical or feasible,鈥 Mr. Zhang says.

Nevertheless 鈥渨e cannot conclude from this report that China will not move forward,鈥 argues Mr. Yao. 鈥淭his was Hu saying goodbye; a new generation is taking over, and Hu does not control the future.鈥

鈥淲e will have to wait and see how Xi Jinping behaves,鈥 agrees Zhang, referring to the man almost certain to take over from Hu at the head of the Communist Party next week. 鈥淏ut if he acts along the lines of this speech, I think a lot of people will give up their last hopes in the Communist Party as an institution.鈥

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