China's
most senior Communist Party leaders have gathered in Beijing for a four-day
meeting that could set the tone for the rest of President Xi Jinping's tenure.
It comes in the wake of a clampdown on corruption.
Deutsche Welle, 25 Oct 2016
The leaders
of China's communist party began a key plenary meeting on Monday as President
Xi Jinping sought to instill the message that his campaign against corruption
is far from over. Some 370 Central Committee members have gathered in Beijing's
Jingxi Hotel, the historic site where former leader Deng Xiaoping launched
reforms that opened up China's economy in 1978.
The
closed-door meeting comes in the wake of Xi punishing more than one million
party members over graft allegations.
The party's
official newspaper wrote on Monday that the summit would "forge an even
stronger, energetic leadership core, ready and waiting to guide China at its
new starting point".
Xi seeks to
shore up power
According to insiders, Xi hopes to finally
overcome opposition to new regulations forcing party members to disclose
foreign assets, many of them hidden under the names of relatives or foreign
business partners. Previous attempts by Xi to root out official corruption have
been shot down by some of the more powerful members of the Central Committee.
Some
commentators also believe the purpose of the meeting is for the president to
crack down on dissent to his administration.
"To
strengthen 'party self-discipline' is just an excuse. The core issue that the
party wants to work on during the plenary is to confirm the new power centre.
It is quite an important meeting, because Xi still hasn't fully established his
power," longtime political commentator Zhang Lifan told German news agency
DPA.
China's
state news outlet Xinhua reported that the main purpose of the meeting is to
get a new set of disciplinary rules approved, but Xi may have a more difficult time than anticipated. Although party meetings take place behind closed doors,
in-fighting between different factions is known to be rampant - especially
between Xi's group and those led by former presidents Jiang Zemin and Hu
Jintao.
Xinhua is
expected to release a lengthy dispatch on the outcome of the proceedings once
they end on Thursday.
es/jm (AP, dpa, Reuters)

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