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BEIJING, Dec. 20 (Xinhua) -- A draft amendment to China's Criminal Law remained unchanged in reducing the number of crimes subject to the death penalty.The draft amendment was submitted Monday to the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC), China's top legislature, for its second reading.In August this year, the NPC Standing Committee discussed the draft amendment during its first reading. The draft amendment will make 13 crimes exempt from capital punishment, if it becomes law.The crimes included: smuggling cultural relics, gold, silver, and other precious metals and rare animals and their products out of the country; carrying out fraudulent activities with financial bills; carrying out fraudulent activities with letters of credit; the false issuance of exclusive value-added tax invoices to defraud export tax refunds or to offset taxes; the forging or selling of forged exclusive value-added tax invoices; the teaching of crime-committing methods; and robbing ancient cultural ruins.During the process of the NPC Standing Committee's discussion, when the draft amendment was released for public submissions, some people suggested some of the 13 crimes be given death penalty while others thought that more crimes should be exempt from capital punishment.If the amendment becomes law, it will be the first time the number of crimes subject to the death penalty has been reduced since the People's Republic of China enacted its criminal law in 1979. It will also be a move by China to limit the use of the death penalty, after the Supreme People's Court in 2007 began to review and approve all death penalty decisions.The current law allows the death penalty for 68 crimes. The draft amendment, if passed, will reduce that number to 55.
BEIJING, Nov. 14 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang has urged more efforts be made to accelerate economic restructuring to achieve sustainable development amid concerns of global uncertainties."The global economy is still facing great uncertainties and has not shaken off the deep impact of the financial crisis", Li wrote in an article Xinhua received Sunday, calling for "deep understanding" of the proposal for national development in the next five years.The Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee's Proposal on Formulating the 12th Five-year Program (2011-2015) on National Economic and Social Development was issued on Oct. 27 after it was adopted at the Fifth Plenary Session of the 17th CPC Central Committee, which ended Oct. 18.The imbalance of the overall world economic recovery remains and trade protectionism is on the rise, Li wrote in the article while calling for correct understanding of both domestic and international situation.Further, Li warned of the potential damage that will be caused by some governments' excessive debt, noting that some major economies continue their expansionary monetary policies and are pumping enormous liquidity into markets to boost their economic recovery, which may spur turbulence in the global financial market and push up commodity prices.Additionally, the inflow of hot money will affect emerging economies, he said."The world economy is growing slowly and the structure of global demand is changing, which puts new pressure on China in its efforts to stabilize and expand exports and maintain a stable and relatively rapid economic growth," Li wrote.The next five years will be crucial for building a moderately prosperous society in an all-round way, he said."The transformation of the economic development mode brooks no delay, and the key for the transformation is to achieve it at an accelerated speed and with practical effects," he said.Only by transforming the development mode can problems of imbalance and unsustainability be resolved, Li said.The government will work to boost domestic demand, consumption in particular, as a long-term strategy to maintain healthy and stable economic development and transform the economic development pattern, he wrote.It is imperative to keep investment at an "appropriate growth rate" and encourage private investment to expand domestic demand, he said.Efforts should also be made to promote balanced urban-rural development and scientific innovation to upgrade industries.Li said China will also move ahead with "vigorous but steady" political reform while pushing forward economic restructuring.The government will reduce its intervention in economy and let market play the role in resource distribution, Li wrote. He also called for stepping up fiscal and taxation reform and strengthening financial supervision to prevent systematic financial risks.The country will open more fields to the outside and enhance opening up in the inland area, he said.He also called for participation in global economic governance and regional cooperation, speeding up the implementation of free trade zone strategy and opposing trade protectionism, so as to push for the development of a just and rational international economic order.
BEIJING, Jan. 7 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang Friday called for improving the management and supervision of China's state-owned assets and promoting the development of state-owned enterprises (SOEs), to preserve and increase the value of state property.Chinese state assets management and supervision authorities should work to improve monitoring systems and boost the scientific development of state-owned economies, as Chinese SOEs will face the "pressing task" of reform and development over the next five years, Zhang told a national conference on state assets supervision and management.Chinese SOEs progressed rapidly in the previous five years, he said, adding that state-owned economies play an important role in the development of the Chinese economy.Zhang urged state assets management and supervision authorities to further improve the organizational and legal systems, accelerate the reform of SOEs, and transform the development pattern of SOEs, which are responsible for taking the lead in China's scientific innovation and making contributions to the nation's development.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday rejected a zero-sum formula on U.S.-China relationship, saying that the two countries have much more to gain from cooperation than from conflict.Delivering a speech on the future relations between the U.S. and China at the State Department, Clinton said it does not make sense to apply zero-sum 19th-century theories of how major powers interact in the 21st century."We reject those views," she said, referring to views which depict China's growth as a "threat" or U.S. policy on China as " containment."The State Department described the speech, delivered to inaugurate an annual forum dedicated to veteran U.S. diplomat Richard Holbrooke, as setting stage for a state visit by Chinese President Hu Jintao next week.Clinton said that the world is moving through uncharted territory and needs new ways of understanding the shifting dynamics of the international landscape, a landscape marked by emerging centers of influence, but also by nontraditional, even non-state actors and the unprecedented challenges and opportunities created by globalization.This is a fact that is especially applicable to the U.S.-China relationship, she said, noting that the engagement between the two countries can only be understood in the context of this new and more complicated landscape."We are in the same boat. And we will either row in the same direction or we will, unfortunately, cause turmoil and whirlpools that will impact not just our two countries, but many people far beyond either of our borders," she said.The secretary said although the United States and China are two complex nations with very different histories, with profoundly different political systems and outlooks, there is a lot about the two peoples that reminds them of each other: an energy, an entrepreneurial dynamism, a commitment to a better future for one' s children and grandchildren."We are both deeply invested in the current order, and we both have much more to gain from cooperation than from conflict," she said. "That doesn't mean we will not be competitors ... But there are ways of doing it that are more likely to benefit than not.""A peaceful and prosperous Asia-Pacific region is in the interest of both China and the United States. A thriving America is good for China and a thriving China is good for America," the secretary said."So all of this calls for careful, steady, dynamic stewardship of this critical relationship," she said."The choices both sides make in the months and years ahead and the policies we pursue will help determine whether our relationship lives up to its promise, and it is up to both of us to translate high-level pledges of summit and state visits into action, real action on real issues," Clinton said.