
Beijing: Chinese President Xi Jinping has begun his second five-year term by firmly displaying his "core leader" status, which equates him with founder of modern China Chairman Mao Zedong, putting himself ahead of other six top leaders for the first time in public.
Xi, 64, along with other six members of the Politburo
Standing Committee, which reflects the collective leadership
of the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC) since it was
introduced in 1981, stood ahead of others yesterday when they
made their high-profile visit to the birthplace of the party
instead of standing along with them, a practice that was
followed for long.
The once-in-a-five-year Congress of the CPC which
concluded on October 24 elected the seven member Standing
Committee which virtually rules the country.
The Congress endorsed a second term for Xi, regarded as
the most powerful leader of China in recent years, and Premier
Li Keqiang, 62 and elected new five members who represented
different factions within the party, which is run on
collective leadership principle.
The other five members of the Standing Committee are Li
Zhanshu, Wang Yang, Wang Huning, Zhao Leji and Han Zheng.
Last year, Xi was conferred "core leader" status by the
party which was bestowed on its founder Mao, his successors
Deng Xiaoping and former President Jiang Zemin.
His status was further elevated by including his
ideological thought in the party Constitution by the Congress,
making him only the third leader of the 96-year-old party to
be accorded such an honour.
Yesterday, in a significant move, Xi along with other
Standing Committee members visited the party office,
established in 1921 at Shanghai, where he displayed his "core
leader" status.
A video clip by state television showed the six men
standing in a row behind Xi, the "core" of the party
leadership, facing a hammer and sickle as they repeated Xi's
words.
"It is my will to join the Chinese Communist Party...
carry out the party's decisions, strictly observe party
discipline, guard party secrets, be loyal to the party.. be
ready at all times to sacrifice my all for the party and the
people, and never betray the party," they said.
Yesterday's trip was Xi's first visit outside the capital
since he began his second term as the most powerful leader
Communist China has seen since Mao.
The video also showed Xi strolling outside the historic
site with other members walking behind him.
Official media quoted Xi as saying that the aim of the
tour was to revisit the Party's past - especially the history
of its founding - to learn from the predecessors of the
revolutionary times and their noble spirit.
The tour should also serve to throw light on the
responsibility the current leadership now bears, and
strengthen their sense of duty to fulfil targets and missions
laid down at the 19th CPC National Congress, he said.
"Only by remaining true to our original aspiration,
keeping our mission firmly in mind, and keeping on striving,
could the Party stay young and live," said Xi who heads the
powerful Central Military Commission (CMC), the overall high
command of Chinese military.
Unlike other countries, the military in China functions
under the party and not under the government.
China revealed its new national police Communist Party
boss today, amid reshuffles at the top of the country's
domestic security apparatus after Xi started his second term
in office.
Since his elevation last week, Xi has been appointing his
supporters in key positions in the provinces as well as at the
centre.
The latest appointment was of 63-year-old Zhao Kezhi as
the new czar of internal security. He worked closely with two
of Xi's trusted aides and has become the party secretary at
the Ministry of Public Security.