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BEIJING, Nov. 8 (Xinhua) -- China has moved to speed up the building of a clean government ruled by law, part of the country's efforts to further enhance the government's credibility and maintain a harmonious social order for its rapid economic development.The Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council, or China' s cabinet, issued guidelines on Monday focusing on creating a government ruled by law, which requires officials and government staff to improve their ability in addressing "prominent problems" through legal means and invites the public to contribute to legislation.According to a statement issued along with the guidelines, the State Council said it was "important" and "imperative" to build a government ruled by law, as China now faces challenges, including imbalanced development of rural and urban areas, a widening income gap, an increased numbers of "social conflicts" , as well as corruption and injustice in law enforcement in some sectors.An official with the Legislative Affairs Office said Monday that the guidelines will further safeguard public interests and maintain social and economic order by requiring stepped-up efforts from authorities to investigate and punish cases that run counter to the country' s mandate for the safe production and issues related to food safety, the protection of natural resources and the environment, as well as public security.The guidelines, which requires officials and government staff to improve their ability in addressing "prominent problems" through legal means, also stipulates that if officials perform their duties according to the law or are skillful at solving disputes by legal means, they will more likely be promoted.However, government officials will be held liable for malfeasance or failure to fulfil their duty in major accidents or cases that have seriously violated laws.Further, the guidelines stress the importance of public participation in legislation, saying people's opinions, reasonable needs and legitimate interests should all be considered in lawmaking.Additionally, the guidelines state that the legislative process shall not be influenced to favor the interests of a certain sector or protect local interests.Also, to facilitate the creation of a clean and transparent government, the guidelines require all government information, aside from that involved in state, commercial or private secrets, to be open to the public.Government departments are also required to reply to pubic requests on the release of government information within a certain period of time and improve the ways of handling government affairs, according to the guidelines.
BEIJING, Dec. 31 (Xinhua) -- China is poised to further improve its people's livelihoods and promote social equity in 2011, the inaugural year of implementing its development blueprint for the 12th Five-Year-Plan period.Only with deep respect and extensive care for people's wills and interests can a ruling party have inexhaustible support from the people and the country, under the leadership of such a party, can accomplish remarkable achievements in development.China, under the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC), is prepared to further deepen reforms in education, health care, housing, public cultural services and enhance investment in people's livelihoods in the new year.Also, more attention of the authorities will be given to protecting the legal rights of China's vulnerable groups and ordinary workers, as well as fulfilling the general public's expectations for a better life.Thanks to the strong leadership of the CPC, China has succeeded in keeping a strong pace in social and economic development over the past year, which marks the perfect conclusion of its well-implemented plan for the last five years (2006-2010).In 2010, China had a relatively rapid economic development. It picked up steps towards economic restructuring and achieved a seventh consecutive year of growth for China's grain output, as well as bettering people's livelihoods, deepening reforms and opening up.China successfully stood the test of natural disasters, including widespread droughts in the southwest region, a 7.1-magnitude earthquake and a huge landslide in northwest Qinghai and Gansu provinces.The government's quick and efficient responses to these emergencies have, for another time, demonstrated the superiority of China's socialism and the great achievements in China's reform and opening up.The country also held the Shanghai World Expo which, attracting 246 participating countries and international organizations and a record number of 73 million visitors, has been hailed as the largest ever such event.Further, the 16th Asian Games held in the southern China city of Guangzhou drew some ten thousand athletes from 45 countries and regions in Asia to compete.The two events provided a splendid picture of how Chinese culture and the world's other cultures co-exist in harmony and displayed a broad-minded and open image of China.All those experiences and achievements China earned in 2010 has set a strong foundation for China to further its reforms and development in the forthcoming five years.A critical period for China to build a well-off society in an all-around way, the coming five to ten years will be a more difficult phase of China's reforms, which will be marked by the interweaving of short-term and long-term problems, structural and systematic problems, as well as domestic and international challenges.That means China will be faced with a more urgent and challenging task in transforming its economic growth mode, improving people's livelihoods and safeguarding social stability.But, basically, China is still within a period of strategic opportunities for its development. China should grasp opportunities for development while tackling challenges.In 2011, China is set to speed up its economic restructuring, with more attention directed to stabilizing its overall price level.China will step up its move towards a coherent and sustainable economic development, maintaining a balance between the speed of development on the one hand, and the economic structure and the quality and efficiency of economic growth, on the other.It is convinced that China, with a strong CPC leadership, will make greater achievements in development in a scientific way and well resolve social and economic conflicts and disputes in 2011, thus advancing the socialism with Chinese characteristics into a brighter future.

BEIJING, Jan. 10 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Hu Jintao vowed Monday that the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the Chinese government will wage the fight against corruption with greater determination and more forceful measures as the situation remains "grave".Addressing a plenary session of the CPC Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), the Party's anti-graft body, Hu said all work should be done with the fundamental interests of the majority of the people as the core concern.Hu, also General Secretary of the CPC Central Committee, said problems that seriously violated the public interest and sparked the most public complaints should be addressed to ensure social justice.He said efforts were needed to strengthen ties between the Party and the people and to enable the people to play a more active role in fighting corruption.Hu pledged to "combat graft strictly and punish corrupt officials severely" so as to win trust from the people.Hu admitted that prominent problems remained in the fight against corruption and efforts to build a clean government, and warned of a "grave situation and arduous tasks."He called for enhanced supervision and monitoring of the implementation of major central government and Party policies and measures and the promotion of a corruption-free work style among officials.He called for reinforced efforts to build a system to prevent and punish corruption."More efforts should be made to investigate graft in key industries and key posts," he said, stressing the supervision of procedures concerning the promotion of local officials to prevent abuse of power or other corrupt conduct.Figures from the CCDI show 146,517 officials across China were punished for disciplinary violations last year, including 5,098 leaders at the county head level or above and 804 officials who were referred for prosecution.Discipline inspection bodies received almost 1.43 million petitions and tip-offs last year and recovered 8.97 billion yuan (1.35 billion U.S. dollars) in economic losses for the state."All comrades in the Party must serve the people with all their hearts and use their power to seek benefits for them. Only by doing so can our work earn the most comprehensive and solid foundation among the people and stand the tests of storms and risks," Hu said.Hu said people-oriented education was needed to guide officials to "willingly stand beside the people, be emotionally close to the people and reply on the people in carrying out their duties."Hu called for the building of a scientific, democratic and lawful decision-making system that would take the people's benefits and ideas fully into account.Hu called for unsparing efforts to promote an efficient and legal work style and solve obvious problems concerning people's lives in order to ensure their economic, political, cultural and social rights.While urging grassroots officials to expand their knowledge and expertise through intensified education, Hu encouraged their superiors to fully understand the difficulties of grassroots work and to take good care of grassroots officials.Hu called on officials from discipline inspection departments at all levels to set an example and to initiate the people-oriented spirit in their work and fulfil their responsibilities to a higher standard.He called for improvements in the anti-corruption system in accordance with an amended anti-corruption regulation released last month.One of the latest CPC moves to battle corruption, the amended regulation adds articles detailing punishments for corrupt officials and sets out penalties for corrupt Party officials who have left their posts or retired.Along with 118 CCDI members, senior Chinese leaders, including Wu Bangguo, Wen Jiabao, Jia Qinglin, Li Changchun, Xi Jinping and Zhou Yongkang, attended the meeting, which was presided over by He Guoqiang, head of the CPC's anti-graft agency.
BEIJING, Dec. 29 (Xinhua) -- China's gross domestic product (GDP) is predicted to grow by around 9.5 percent in 2011, 0.5 percentage points lower compared to the growth rate expected for this year, said a report issued Wednesday by the Bank of China (BOC).The report by the BOC, China's third largest lender, was based on the bank's projections of weak overseas demand, tighter monetary policy, and the government's planned economic restructuring for 2011, the first year of China's 12th five-year plan.The Chinese government announced in early December that it will switch its monetary policy stance from relatively loose to prudent next year to tackle rising inflation and keep economic growth at a sustainable pace.The report also said government policies this year to curb soaring property prices in some major cities, and the country's efforts to improve energy efficiency had slowed the economy with the GDP dropping to 9.6 percent in the third quarter, down from the second quarter's 10.3 percent and 11.9 percent in the first quarter.The report also forecast inflation to rise 4 percent in 2011, compared to the 3.3-percent rise expected for 2010. It said that in the second half of the year, the producer price index (PPI) for China's industrial products had kept rising along with the consumer price index (CPI), adding more inflationary pressure for the future.The Chinese government set a 3-percent target for inflation this year, but looks unachieveable after the index rose 3.2 percent during the first 11 months. Pushed up mainly by rising food prices, the index soared 5.1 percent in November to a 28-month high.The report also predicted new lending next year would be 7 trillion yuan (1.06 trillion U.S. dollars), just slightly down from the 7.5 trillion yuan target set by the government for 2010.Growth rates of retail sales of consumer goods and industrial value-added output would see a slight drop from year 2010, while imports would likely grow by 18 percent, 3 percentage points higher than exports.As inflation triggers wider public concerns, expectations for more hikes in interest rates are strengthening. The report forecast the People's Bank of China, the central bank, would likely hike rates for up to three times next year, mostly during the first half of the year.The central bank on Sunday raised the benchmark one-year lending and deposit rates by 25 basis points for the second time in just over two months. It had also set higher commercial lenders' reserve requirement ratio six times this year in a move to tighten liquidity amid climbing inflation.
CHENGDU, Nov. 21 (Xinhua) -- Twenty-eight miners were trapped in a colliery flood in southwest China's Sichuan Province on Sunday, the local safety watchdog said.The accident happened at 11 a.m. in Weiyuan County of Neijiang City.Altogether 41 miners were working underground when a pit of Batian Coal Mine was flooded. Thirteen of them escaped, said Lin Shucheng, chief of the provincial work safety bureau.He said rescuers had begun pumping flood water from the pit early in the afternoon. "We have sent four trucks of pumping equipment from Chengdu to help the rescue work."Graphic shows twenty-eight miners were trapped in a colliery flood in southwest China's Sichuan Province on Nov. 21, 2010.He said medical workers were standing by to provide first-aid.Lin said the Batian Coal Mine had undergone a renovation to increase its annual output to 60,000 tonnes from the designed 50,000 tonnes. "But all its operation was legal. Its business license and production permits are valid."A similar flooding trapped three workers who were prospecting for an iron mine in the southern Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region Saturday night. Rescue work continued Sunday.
来源:资阳报