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China's 2017 Two Sessions (NPC & CPPCC): News and Analyses

That goal of eradicating poverty by 2020 sounds about right.

Xi’s Chinese Dream is described as achieving the "Two 100's":
  1. The material goal of becoming a moderately well-off society by 2021, which is the 100th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party.
  2. The modernization goal of becoming a fully developed nation by 2049, which is the 100th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.
 
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Li says Guangxi should boost competitive edge
By HU YONGQI | China Daily | Updated: 2017-03-09

Innovation and entrepreneurship needed, premier tells deputies


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Premier Li Keqiang listens to a report from Zhou Hongbo, mayor of Nanning in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, during the Guangxi delegation's deliberation on the Government Work Report on Wednesday, as Peng Qinghua, Guangxi Party chief, looks on. [Photo by Wu Zhiyi/China Daily]


Premier Li Keqiang called on the Guangxi Province to further open up and participate in international cooperation and competition when he joined a panel discussion with National People's Congress deputies from the region on Wednesday.

This should be achieved by promoting innovation and entrepreneurship, which will upgrade traditional industries and transform the real economy, he said.

Guangxi is an important region for China's economic cooperation and trade with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. Each year, the China-ASEAN Expo is held in Nanning, the region's capital, and attracts thousands of exhibitors from the 10 ASEAN countries.

From January to November last year, Guangxi's exports and imports with ASEAN countries increased by 1.6 percent compared with the same period in 2015, according to the region's Department of Commerce. Southeast Asian countries were once again Guangxi's biggest trading partner.

The region's gross domestic product hit 2 trillion yuan ($289.4 billion) last year, double that of 2011. However, the region still has 3.41 million people living in poverty in its outlying areas.

Li said Guangxi has witnessed long-term progress in social and economic development in recent years. He urged further efforts to fulfill the government's promise to improve the livelihoods of all people of different ethnic groups in the region, especially those who live in impoverished areas and near national borders.

Li said reform and opening-up will boost the momentum of economic and social development, and the government should streamline administration, removing powers it should not have, and focus on supervising areas it is meant to manage, he said.

The government should proactively provide services for enterprises and cultivate an environment of fair competition, Li added.

On Wednesday, four other members of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee-Zhang Dejiang, Yu Zhengsheng, Liu Yunshan and Zhang Gaoli-also joined discussions with NPC deputies.

In a group discussion with deputies of the Hainan delegation, Yu, chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, called on the province to improve its economic structure and accelerate the campaign to build an international tourism island while fully protecting its ecology.

During a meeting of the Hebei delegation, Vice-Premier Zhang Gaoli called on the province to firmly promote supply-side structural reform, upgrade its industries and strengthen environmental protection. He also called for solid preparations for the 2022 Winter Olympic Games, which will be co-hosted by Beijing and Hebei's Zhangjiakou.
 
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Xinhua Insight: Cultural protection enhanced for small ethnic minorities

Source: Xinhua | 2017-03-07 15:51:13 | Editor: huaxia
by Xinhua writers Wang Xiaopeng and Wang Jun

BEIJING, March 7 (Xinhua) -- "I am proud my home village has preserved its traditional style," said Tashi Yangjen, the only deputy to the 12th National People's Congress (NPC) from the Luoba ethnic group.

Luoba is one of the smallest ethnic minorities in China.

Tashi Yangjen, 36, grew up in a mountainous Luoba village in Shannan prefecture in southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, though the prefecture was officially reclassified as a city in 2016.

As an NPC deputy, the first suggestion Tashi Yangjen submitted to the NPC session in 2013 was on retaining the traditional design of Luoba homes, which are usually thatched with straw.

She was worried that the outlook of the village would change as the government revamped and rebuilt village homes, mostly built with stone, wood and straw.

Her proposal was a success. In May 2014, the government approved a plan to preserve the Luoba village.

Now there are 23 new homes built with reinforced concrete in the village that look almost the same as traditional Luoba homes. Their roofs are not covered by straw, but metal that resembles straw.

Tashi Yangjen's suggestions as an NPC deputy were not just about housing. She also proposed that Luoba culture be protected, including language and clothing, as well as improved infrastructure.

Things are getting better for Luoba people. There is a sewage treatment service in her home village, in addition to a garbage disposal facility.

A small factory for making Luoba costume is being built. Upon completion, about five Luoba people will work there making souvenirs and Luoba dresses, which usually feature red, black or white stripes. Together with traditional dress, Luoba women often wear accessories, including long necklaces and headwear made of blue beads.

The Luoba ethnic group has no written language.

"The spoken language of the Luoba is also protected, as traditional words are collected and Luoba children are able to learn them from preschool education," Tashi Yangjen told Xinhua during the ongoing annual session of the 12th NPC.

Tashi Yangjen's suggestions also include improving the subsidies offered to residents living in border regions. This year she plans to submit a proposal to build more public facilities, including small parks where people can get together for events.

"The people's congresses are good because deputies' motions and suggestions are responded to," she said, adding the system is sound because it entitles ethnic minorities, however small, to have at least one NPC deputy.

PART-TIME LAWMAKER

NPC deputies are part-time, and a deputy to the NPC can be the country's president or a farmer, a celebrated tycoon or a migrant worker, a lawyer or an official.

Tashi Yangjen was born into a poor family of wheat and barley farmers, and is currently a township official in the Tibetan city.

She was educated in a Tibetan school in Changzhou city in eastern Jiangsu Province and a college in Yueyang city in central Hunan Province, before becoming a primary school teacher in 2004.

The government has been sending students from Tibet to study at high schools in inland cities since 1985 in the hopes of training more professionals for the underdeveloped plateau region and boosting Tibet's development.

Currently about 20,000 students from the region are studying in high schools in inland regions, including Beijing, Shanghai and Jiangsu. The free education has enabled hard-working Tibetan children to attend school, even if their families are poor.

Tibet has a huge task to relieve 690,000 people out of poverty between 2016 and 2020.

During the five years starting 2011, Tibet lifted more than 600,000 people from poverty.

Tashi Yangjen said she was happy that all the residents in her home village were lifted out poverty last year.

BETTER FUTURE

There are 56 ethnic groups in China, with Han people representing the bulk of population. Each ethnic minority is entitled to have at least one deputy to the NPC, and Tashi Yangjen is one of about 400 ethnic minority deputies to the 12th NPC.

These deputies are active in protecting their traditional culture, in addition to making submissions on other issues, including national development.

Padma Chodron, the only NPC deputy of the Menba ethnic group, has a similar educational experience to Tashi Yangjen. Padma Chodron is a township official in Medog County in Nyingchi City of Tibet, and has been focusing on the cultural protection of the Menba, which also has a small population.

She submitted a suggestion to the NPC session last year, calling for a county-level institution to protect and develop the ethnic minority language.

"Our Menba people only have a spoken language," she said. "If no one speaks the language, many of the traditions of the ethnic group will inevitably disappear."

To her delight, in 2016 the local government organized a team to record the customs, legends and ballads of the ethnic group as well as the memories of folk artists.

Observers believe the future of the smaller ethnic groups looks bright either in cultural protection or living standards, as the government attaches greater importance to their development.

According to the government work report delivered by Premier Li Keqiang at the NPC session on Sunday, the government will increase support for development in areas inhabited mainly by ethnic minorities.

"We will protect and develop the fine traditional culture of ethnic minorities and support the growth of ethnic groups with smaller populations," Li said.
It would seem a lot of China's minority being poor because they want to preserve their own culture and not integrate with society and learn the official language. Uighur are one sych group that comes to mind. Better spending time learning mandarin than read that "book" all day. I really believe CPC failed to integrate minorities in Chinese society
 
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CY Leung elected vice chairman of CPPCC National Committee
Xinhua, March 13, 2017

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Leung Chun-ying walks toward the rostrum at the closing meeting of the annual session of the the 12th National Committee of the CPPCC on Monday.[Photo by Jiang Dong / China Daily]

Leung Chun-ying, chief executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), was elected Monday vice chairman of the 12th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).

He was elected at the closing meeting of the annual session of the top political advisory body.

Leung was elected chief executive of HKSAR in March 2012 and took office on July 1 the same year. This year, Hong Kong will celebrate the 20th anniversary of its return to the motherland and a new chief executive will be elected.

Leung announced late last year that he would not seek re-election in 2017 due to family reasons.

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Welcome to CPPCC body, Mr. Leung, although it is sad to see him leaving his post. He has been a great CEO of HK province.

@Chinese-Dragon
 
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Welcome to CPPCC body, Mr. Leung, although it is sad to see him leaving his post.

He has been a great CEO of HK province.

@Chinese-Dragon

Hmm, debatable. :P

But HK Chief Executives have been pretty awful across the board, and it's a fact that the other options were far worse than him. He was the least bad option by far.

And he is not a traitor, he is loyal to his motherland. So for that, I certainly wish him further success and happiness, and hope he does well in his new position. :china:
 
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Working parents welcome more public nursery services
Source: Xinhua 2017-03-13 14:15:04

BEIJING, March 13 (Xinhua) -- Chinese working mothers are pleased with the proposal to provide public nursery services during the annual two sessions.

The proposal states that financial support for public nursery services and private investment in the sector must be encouraged.

"I am now looking for a qualified nursery for my two-year-old son as his grandma can no longer take care of him due to poor health," said Bi Huahua, who works for a foreign enterprise in Beijing.

"Public kindergartens usually take children who are above three years old, but can't wait another year," she added.

A lack of eligible people to take care of children has become a common headache for working parents in big cities, such as Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen

"A qualified nursery will help working moms to balance their lives, and I am really looking forward to that," posted WeChat user Nuannuanma.

"Professional nurseries will help to reduce quarrels with our mothers-in-law as we sometimes disagree on how to raise a child, and developed countries already provide such services," posted Iqsi on Weibo, a Twitter-like service.

China implemented the one-child policy in the late 1970s to rein in a surging population.

In order to cope with an aging society, since Jan. 1, 2016, married couples have been allowed to have two children. This follows an easing of the one-child policy in 2013 that allowed couples to have a second child if either parent was an only child.

However, according to a survey of 10,000 families with children under 15 years old by the All-China Women's Federation in December last year, 53.3 percent of one-child families do not want a second child.

Another survey, by the National Health and Family Planning Commission in 2013 and 2015, showed that there were three main factors affecting willingness to have a second child: women's career development, insufficient child-care resources, especially for toddlers, and financial considerations.

In an effort to support the two-child policy, China has promised to provide 89,000 more maternity beds as well as 140,000 more obstetricians and midwives by 2020.

"The government is considering a tax deduction for two-child families," said Finance Minister Xiao Jie at a press conference during the two sessions.
 
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