Former China’s Premier, Li Keqiang, Dies @ 68
Chinaās former Premier, Li Keqiang, has died suddenly at the age of 68, according to Chinese state media, Xinhua news agency.
Li, who served as Chinaās number two leader for ten years until being replaced earlier this year, had a sudden heart attack and died in Shanghai in the early hours of Friday morning.
āComrade Li Keqiang, while resting in Shanghai in recent days, experienced a sudden heart attack on October 26 and after all-out efforts to revive him failed, died in Shanghai at ten minutes past midnight on October 27,ā state broadcaster CCTV reported.
Observers said Li would be remembered as an advocate for a freer market and Chinaās more impoverished citizens, but also as a symbol of the political alternative sidelined by the autocratic rise of Xi Jinping.
Li was premier, the second-highest position in Chinaās political system, for a decade from 2013 until he was replaced by Li Qiang in March. āNo matter how the international winds and clouds change, China will unswervingly expand its opening upā, Li said in March, at his last public appearance in a press conference, adding;Ā āThe Yangtze River and the Yellow River will not flow backward.ā
In a sign of how the news of his death was being handled by the authorities, some social media users reported that they had been blocked from posting footage of his remarks. In the past, mourning events after the deaths of former leaders have been used by people to express discontent with the current regime.
On Friday morning, Liās death was the top trending topic on Weibo, Chinaās Twitter-like social media platform. Many commenters expressed shock and grief but comments on posts ā which were mostly limited to news and government accounts ā were restricted or controlled, with only a selection visible.
Earlier in the day there had been some posts of a song titled āUnfortunately not youā by Fish Leong, which netizens have taken to sharing when a world leader dies, in an apparent reference to Xi, who cannot be openly criticised safely.
Li was believed to be popular among Chinese people and officials, even after his removal as premier. Seen as former leader Hu Jintaoās preferred successor as president, he was overlooked when the leadership chose Xi Jinping in 2012. Li and Hu were both members of Xiās rival faction within the Chinese Communist Party, but its cohort has been sidelined in recent years as Xi consolidated his personal power and moved acolytes into key positions.
āHis decade-long tenure also saw a general inability to prevent the political decline of Liās and his mentor Hu Jintaoās power base, the Communist Youth League,ā said Wen-ti Sung, a China expert at the Australian National University.
The son of a local official in the impoverished province of Anhui, Li was sent to the countryside to work as a manual labourer during the Cultural Revolution. He went on to gain a law degree from Peking University, where classmates say he embraced Western and liberal political theory, translating a book on the law by a British judge.
But he became more orthodox after joining the ranks of officialdom in the mid-80s, working as a bureaucrat while his former classmates protested in Tiananmen Square in 1989, and rising up the ranks through his involvement in the Communist Party Youth League.
In 1998 he became Chinaās youngest governor, appointed to the densely populated central province of Henan, where he later became party secretary. His reputation was damaged by his handling of an HIV/Aids epidemic stemming from a tainted blood donation programme while in the role. After a stint as party chief of the northern province of Liaoning, he was promoted to Vice Premier under former premier Wen Jiabao from 2008 to 2013, overseeing economic development and macroeconomic management.
He was known internationally in part for the āLi Keqiang indexā, a term coined by the Economist for an informal measurement of Chinaās economic progress. It was based on a leaked conversation between Li and a US diplomat when Li was party chief in Liaoning. Li reportedly said the provinceās GDP figures were āunreliableā and suggested a clearer picture could be taken from electricity consumption, rail cargo, and bank lending data.
Sung said Li would likely be remembered as having ālooked out for the little guysā, citing Liās statement during the pandemic that: ā600 million Chinese people still make barely 1,000 RMB a month. After Covid peopleās livelihood should be our priority.ā
But Sung said he would also be remembered for what ācould have beenā. HeĀ was a proponent of economic reform and had at times spoken of Chinaās economic and social challenges. However, he largely toed the party line, particularly as Xi tightened his grip on power.
During his farewell tour of ministries earlier this year Li renewed calls for economic reform, and videos of him visiting some departments and being warmly greeted were later censored from Chinese social media.
Adam Ni, an independent Chinese political analyst, and author, described Li as āa premier who stood powerless as China took a sharp turn away from reform and openingā. – The Guardian reports with additional research by Chi Hui Lin