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'Xi the Great,' tamer of floods

Froggy

Alfrescian (InfP) + Mod
Moderator
Generous Asset
https://asia.nikkei.com/Editor-s-Pi...=9&pub_date=20200828004507&seq_num=2&si=44594

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Yu the Great became a legendary ruler in China for his introduction of flood control. Will President Xi Jinping be credited for harnessing the floods of 2020? (Nikkei Montage/Source photos by AP and Getty Images)

China portrays 'Xi the Great,' tamer of floods
President shows who's boss, while premier is sidelined in the m&d
KATSUJI NAKAZAWA, Nikkei senior staff writerAugust 27, 2020 06:10 JST

TOKYO -- Despite serious flood damage in various parts of China, President Xi Jinping had not visited any of the impacted areas.

But on Aug. 18, Xi suddenly appeared in flood-hit Anhui Province for an inspection, one that seems to have followed the conclusion of the annual summer gathering of Chinese Communist Party leaders and elders, the Beidaihe meeting.

"He must have been warned by elders about the special meaning of flood control in Chinese politics," one party source said.

Wearing shiny leather shoes and smiling under the blue Anhui sky, Xi talked with local folks about flood prevention, river management and disaster relief.

"The foolish old man removes the mountains, and 'Yu the Great' controlled the waters," Xi said, according to a Xinhua News Agency roundup of the four-day visit.

"The Chinese nation has fought against natural disasters for thousands of years and accumulated valuable experience. We should continue to fight," he said, not by fighting against God, but by respecting nature and complying with natural laws.

By referring to Yu the Great, a legendary emperor in ancient China who put in place irrigation canals that channeled water to fields, Xi highlighted China's several-thousand-year history of fighting natural disasters.


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President Xi addresses military personnel assigned to flood-protection duty in Anhui Province. China's history is filled with tales about maintaining or gaining political power by controlling and channeling water. © Xinhua/Kyodo

It is true that flood control has been particularly significant in China. Bringing raging rivers under control was so difficult that people who had the ability to harness the waters were fit to become kings or emperors.

Failure to control floods meant farmers would suffer and be driven to their deaths.

As China's "core" leader, that responsibility today falls on Xi.

Furthermore, this year is the Year of Geng Zi, or Metal Rat, which comes once every 60 years and is said to always bring with it a big history-shaking incident, which the superstitious Chinese take seriously.

Already, the country has been hit hard by the coronavirus. True to Metal-Rat year form, the outbreak has not been the only calamity. Floods are also causing damage even greater than the floods of 1998.

Back then, President Jiang Zemin postponed an official visit to Japan to see to relief efforts in the Yangtze River basin and the northeastern part of the country.

It is not hard to imagine that Jiang had a word or two to say about flood control at the Beidaihe meeting.


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Then President Jiang Zemin in Wuhan, Hubei Province, oversees the response to what in the summer of 1998 was China's worst flooding in 44 years, when storms took more than 2,000 lives and left millions homeless. © AP/Kyodo

In fact, many of the party elders are specialists on the topic.

Hu Jintao, Xi's immediate predecessor as Chinese president, worked as a hydroelectric power generation-related engineer after graduating from the Water Conservancy Engineering Department of the prestigious Tsinghua University.

Wen Jiabao, who served as Chinese premier in the Hu administration, is a geology expert.

While in Anhui, Xi also referenced a foolish old man who tried to remove mountains, arming himself with the political connotations of a Chinese fable of an elderly man who lived in northern China. Bothered by two mountains that stood in front of his doorway, blocking the view and the path, the man, with the help of his sons, began digging through them with hoes and baskets.

When questioned by another man why he was undertaking such a foolish task, the old man replied that when he dies his sons will carry on, as will his grandsons and then their sons and grandsons, and so on to infinity, ultimately removing the peaks.

Impressed by his conviction, God sent down two angels who carried the mountains away on their backs, the tale goes.

Mao Zedong, communist China's founding father, was fond of citing this story. When he visited the Soviet Union, Mao told it to Josef Stalin, to counter the tale of the Gigantic Turnip, a Russian folk tale the host had mentioned in preaching the importance of cooperation between the two countries.


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Russia's President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping at the Kremlin in March 2013. Former Chinese leader Mao Zedong told Josef Stalin the tale of the foolish old man during a visit to the Soviet Union. © Reuters

During the same tour, Xi inspected the floodgates of the Wangjiaba Dam on the Huai River.

In 1950, shortly after the People's Republic of China was founded in October 1949, the Huai River, which flows through Anhui, was hit by severe flooding. Mao issued an order to control the floods at any cost. The floodgates Xi visited were quickly constructed on Mao's instructions.

Once again, Xi was overlapping himself with Mao, perhaps in preparation for a difficult political situation ahead.

Chinese state media played along, publishing a photograph of Xi swaggering and strutting with a smile in front of a wall with Mao's calligraphy inscribed on it.

While Xi was in the spotlight, Premier Li Keqiang was visiting another flood-hit area, one about 1,000 km away, but was mostly ignored.

It is quite unusual for China's top two leaders to be away from Beijing at the same time on inspection tours.

On Aug. 20, two days after Xi arrived in Anhui, Li inspected a flood-affected area of Chongqing as the metropolis was still in the throes of the disaster.

Wearing rain boots, Li trudged through muddy waters. Usually, such images receive high praise from citizens, and comments about "the people's premier" staying close to the people fill social media platforms.


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It is hard to argue that Premier Li Keqiang has not been sidelined. © Chinese government Weibo/Kyodo

But not this time. Perhaps this is because many Chinese people were not told of the trip.

Li's Chongqing visit was initially reported only by www.gov.cn, the website affiliated with the State Council, the Chinese government headed by him.

Major Chinese media outlets such as state-run Xinhua News Agency, state-run China Central Television and party mouthpiece the People's Daily officially reported Li's inspection tour an unusually tardy three to four days later.

Furthermore, the major Chinese media outlets treated Li's inspection tour as the fourth most important news item of the day, at best.

The reports did not mention when Li visited Chongqing. If they had, questions would have been raised about why the coverage ran so belatedly.

Chongqing news outlets also reported the trip after a delay, despite the fact that Chen Min'er, the city's party secretary and a close aide to Xi, accompanied Li on his inspection tour.

The downplaying of Li's trip was likely an attempt to play up the Anhui visit made by Xi, China's unrivaled "core" leader.

Li has also been sidelined in discussions about a future long-term economic plan.

On Monday, an important meeting chaired by Xi was held at Beijing's Zhongnanghai, home to party and government headquarters. Xi listened to economic experts' opinions on a new five-year plan that starts next year.

Among the meeting participants were China's No. 5 Wang Huning and No. 7 Han Zheng, both Politburo Standing Committee members, as well as Vice Premier Liu He and party publicity chief Huang Kunming.

Li, whose primary job is economic management, was not present.

By rule, Li is set to remain a member of the party's top decision-making body at least until the autumn of 2022 and premier until the spring of 2023.

Nevertheless, China's No. 2 is not presiding over discussions about the 2021-2025 plan. It is hard to argue he has not been sidelined.

Chinese politics under Xi's rule is always harsh. His faction controls key positions in party publicity, which is likely what led to the media's extremely unequal treatment of the flood inspection tours.

In addition to the next five-year plan, an ultra-long-term economic outlook for 2035 will also be discussed at the fifth plenary session of the party's 19th Central Committee, in October.

Xi stressed at the meeting on Monday the importance of adopting "a long-term perspective," of grasping the direction of the times and extensively pooling wisdom to study new circumstances and make new plans.

In effect, he has been showing the Chinese people who's boss and telling them his reign is set to last into the foreseeable future.

Katsuji Nakazawa is a Tokyo-based senior staff writer and editorial writer at Nikkei. He has spent seven years in China as a correspondent and later as China bureau chief. He is the 2014 recipient of the Vaughn-Ueda International Journalist prize for international reporting.
 

shockshiok

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2020/08/photos-chinas-summer-of-floods/615661/


Photos: China’s Summer of Floods
Throughout the summer, unusually heavy rainfall has caused a series of devastating floods across parts of central and southwestern China. Tens of thousands of residents have been forced from their homes, hundreds have been killed, and authorities now warn that the Three Gorges Dam is facing the largest flood peak in its history. Gathered here are images of the high water and some of the damage it has caused over the past few months.
HINTS: View this page full screen. Skip to the next and previous photo by typing j/k or ←/→.
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    An aerial view of the Kwanyin Temple in the middle of the flooded Yangtze River on July 24, 2020, in Ezhou, China. The temple, on a rocky island in the mighty river, was first built in 1345, and has collapsed and been rebuilt multiple times across history. #
    Getty

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    Rainwater pours onto the city of Liuzhou in China, on August 3, 2020. #
    Liang Xiashun / VCG via Getty
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    Flooding covers a bridge entry ramp in Wuhan, photographed on July 13, 2020. #
    Costfoto / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    Rescue workers evacuate people trapped by flooding in Chongqing on June 28, 2020. #
    Costfoto / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    This photo, taken on June 7, 2020, shows submerged streets and inundated buildings after heavy rain caused flooding in Yangshuo, in China's southern Guangxi region. #
    AFP / Getty
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    A view of Huangguoshu Waterfall at flood stage on June 14, 2020, in Anshun. #
    Wu Dongjun / VCG via Getty

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    A view of the ancient town of Xiasi surrounded by floodwater in Kaili, seen on June 23, 2020. #
    Feature China / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    Rainfall caused a mudslide, which collapsed part of a road in Chongqing on July 4, 2020. #
    Costfoto / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    An aerial view of the Han River, seen after a heavy rainfall washed m&d into the river, on June 28, 2020, in Xiangyang. #
    Yang Dong / VCG via Getty
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    Residents ride a boat past a damaged and flood-affected house near Poyang Lake after torrential rains in Shangrao, on July 15, 2020. #
    AFP / Getty
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    The Xiaolangdi Reservoir on the Yellow River discharges flood and sand on July 5, 2020, in Luoyang. #
    Jia Fangwen / VCG via Getty

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    Paramilitary policemen help clean up after floodwater receded in Chongqing. #
    Feature China / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    This aerial view shows submerged streets and inundated buildings after a dam was breached due to flooding in Jiujiang, on July 13, 2020. #
    AFP / Getty
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    A policeman directs traffic on a flooded road in Nanchang on July 7, 2020. #
    Feature China / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    Floodwater reached the feet of the Leshan Giant Buddha in Leshan, on August 18, 2020. It is the first time since 1949 that the 71-meter-high statue, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, has been submerged to the toes. #
    Costfoto / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    This photo, taken on July 8, 2020, shows debris at the scene of a landslide in Huangmei. #
    AFP / Getty

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    Emergency equipment clears a road blocked by landslides in Chongqing on July 6, 2020. #
    Costfoto / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    A tugboat carries a removed pontoon to the shore in Binzhou, on June 26, 2020. The pontoon bridge was dismantled ahead of record high waters in the Yellow River. #
    Costfoto / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    Soldiers rush to shore up a failing dike on July 26, 2020, in Hefei. #
    TPG / Getty
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    The Hukou Waterfall on the Yellow River is seen on July 5, 2020, in Linfen. #
    Xue Jun / VCG via Getty
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    The water of the Yangtze River rises in Chongqing on July 27, 2020. #
    Costfoto / Barcroft Media / Getty

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    Fire and rescue workers rescue two trapped people in Chongqing on June 28, 2020. #
    Costfoto / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    This aerial photo, taken on July 28, 2020, shows a flooded sports ground along the Yangtze River in Wuhan. #
    AFP / Getty
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    A rescue worker paddles across a flooded street in Chongqing on August 19, 2020. #
    AFP / Getty
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    Flood discharge flows from the Yutan Hydropower Station in Chongqing on July 18, 2020. #
    Costfoto / Barcroft Media / Getty
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    A man swims to a submerged pavilion in the flooded Yangtze River in Wuhan on July 12, 2020. #
    Feature China / Barcroft Media / Getty
 

mojito

Alfrescian
Loyal
The mandate of heaven is clearly with CCP! Heaven sides with Xi, and not Li! A clear sign! I cower before your benevolence! :notworthy:
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Mark my words. His picture will replace Mao on Tiananmen Square and all tiong currency.

Nah... he'll end up like Hitler, Saddam or Soleimani. Maybe Ceausescu.

Print whatever face on the RMB is pointless, for it'll end up more worthless than hell notes. :cool:
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Change the weather not the flood.... make the artificial sun control the winter snow falls and by summer not much snow to melt...
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Commentary: Why is former Chinese premier Wen Jiabao’s eulogy about his mother being censored?
Chinese censors may have deemed the Macau Herald article to be an unacceptable, scalding criticism of President Xi Jinping and his policies, but that view is unwarranted, says Professor Bo Zhiyue.
Chinese President Xi Jinping talks to former Chinese premier Wen Jiabao after the closing session of the National People's Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Mar 17, 2013. (Photo: AFP/Goh Chai Hin)
By Bo Zhiyue
22 Apr 2021 06:11AM (Updated: 22 Apr 2021 09:30AM)
Bookmark
SHENZHEN: Who would have thought a eulogy penned by a former head of government could be cancelled?
Yet when Wen Jiabao, ex-premier of the People’s Republic of China from 2003 to 2013, published a four-part series reminiscing about his late mother, Yang Zhiyun, in a local Macau journal Macao Herald from Mar 25 to Apr 15, the unthinkable happened.

Sharing of the full article has been blocked on WeChat, the most popular Internet platform in China. Links to the tribute on Weibo returned an error message.
There has been no official acknowledgement that the post has been deliberately curbed, nor any specific explanation why Mr Wen’s article has been blocked, apart from pop-up messages citing violation of platform rules.
But there has been a lot of talk about what seemed like Mr Wen’s coded criticisms of Chinese President Xi Jinping and his policies.
READ: Commentary: China’s divide-and-conquer strategy isn’t fooling anyone anymore

RETIREMENT A NEW SENSITIVE WORD
Mr Wen’s very carefully worded article has not been well-received by Chinese censors for five possible reasons.
First, he mentioned “retirement” three times. He talked about his father’s retirement once but his own retirement twice.
“I retired,” he said, “after having worked in the Zhongnanhai for 28 years, including 10 years as Premier.”

The Constitution of the People’s Republic of China before its 2018 revision stipulated that a Premier could serve for two consecutive terms. Mr Wen followed the stipulation and retired. He referred to retirement as a good institution.

Soldiers march in Tiananmen Square before a wreath laying ceremony marking the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China in Beijing, China, September 30, 2019. (Photo: REUTERS/Thomas Peter)

For Chinese censors, however, retirement is a sensitive term. Term limits on China’s presidency were recently lifted.
Focusing on political retirement seems to go against the grain of the expectation that President Xi might not retire anytime soon and is in fact likely to stay beyond two terms.
This word, “retirement,” combined with two related numbers, 10 years and two terms, has immense political implications for the upcoming 20th Party Congress in 2022, when President Xi would have stepped down and handed power over to a new leader.
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READ: Commentary: Why China’s US$2.8 billion fine is a huge relief for Alibaba

COUNTRY, ANOTHER SENSITIVE WORD
Second, Mr Wen used the term “country” six times but not “party” even once, signalling that in his eyes, the country is more important than the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
This takes on a different meaning when the term, party, has more frequently referred to the core of the CCP leadership.
When someone is described as being disloyal to the party, for instance, he or she is in fact regarded as being disloyal to the core leader of the CCP, President Xi.

China's President Xi Jinping, seen in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing in March 2021, has tense relations with the United States but the two nations are looking to prioritize climate AFP/NICOLAS ASFOURI

In deliberately omitting the word from his eulogies, Mr Wen’s article could have signalled he did not want to be seen as another personal loyalist of the core leader.
Worse, he elevated the ideals of virtue beyond personal loyalty in emphasising his patriotism to the People’s Republic of China and his love of the Chinese people.
POSITIVE REFRAMING OF THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION
Third, Mr Wen referred to the Cultural Revolution six times and expressed his deep resentment towards the political campaign initiated by Mao Zedong and executed by Mao’s wife and her followers.
He described the Cultural Revolution as a major disaster to his family who had to endure hardship to make an honest living.
His comments stand in sharp contrast to events over the past eight years. Under the new Chinese leadership, the legacy of the Cultural Revolution has been revised and reframed as a poignant moment in the CCP’s history worth commemorating.
READ: Commentary: China more focused on getting rich than it is in stoking US rivalry

New school textbooks, glossing over the unrest and upheaval, have sparked discussions over that controversial period in time.
Symbols of the Cultural Revolution have also been revived and couched in positive terms. Mao Zedong’s wife Jiang Qing’s tomb has been opened for public view.
Madame Mao’s pet operas The White-Haired Girl and the Red Detachment of Women, both lionising the suffering of the female peasantry, are staging performances again to celebrate the centenary of the CCP's founding in 2021.

Work on display at the Hong Kong Museum of Art exhibition include a piece by Chinese painter Zhang Xiaogang and a silkscreen of 'Portrait of Chairman Mao Zedong' by US artist Andy Warhol. (Photo: AFP/Anthony WALLACE)

WEN JIABAO’S VISION PROBLEMATIC
Fourth, Mr Wen mentioned his vision of China. In his view, China should be a country full of justice and fairness.
It should be a country with “eternal respect for human hearts, human morality and humanity” and where there always is “an air of youth, freedom, and hard work”.
For this kind of country, Mr Wen wrote, “I cried over and fought for.”
The implication of Mr Wen’s words is that today’s China is not the same country and that few in power are selflessly fighting for these national goals.
READ: Commentary: China's boycott of H&M, Nike and other big brands is really bizarre

THE ALTERNATIVE LEADER
Fifth, it may be the censors’ understanding that current leader, President Xi, wants to be unconditionally supported as the unrivalled core of the Party.
They think he wants to be regarded as not only the most consequential leader of the CCP who has unconditional support from all in the past eight or nine years since the 18th National Party Congress when he assumed power but also over the past 40 years since China’s opening up and potentially since the CCP’s founding.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and other leaders attend the closing session of the National People's Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China on Mar 11, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins)

Mr Xi did manage to enshrine his ideological contribution into the CCP Constitution as “Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era” in 2017, placing him on par with Mao.
That an opinion piece by a former premier with a good reputation has been censored remains the most startling fact.
Unfortunately for Mr Wen, his article has been regarded by the Chinese censors as a veiled criticism of President Xi and his policies and had to be managed, even though there are no indications that Mr Wen’s intention was to criticise Mr Xi.
His words read at face value also emphasise his lack of contact with the realities in China. “In the past eight years,” Mr Wen said in the article. “I seldom go outside and have often stayed with her (his mother).” His opinion piece was all about his mother and his family.
There are also no signs Mr Wen has ever intended to challenge President Xi’s leadership. On the contrary, it was Mr Wen, along with others, who supported Xi as the next leader of the Chinese Communist Party at the 18th National Party Congress in 2012.
READ: Commentary: China’s pineapple ban another prickle in relations with Taiwan

So while his article says nothing explicit about Mr Xi, his policies or the general direction China is heading towards under Mr Xi, the fact that Mr Wen mentioned his own retirement, the suffering of his own family during the Cultural Revolution, and his own vision for China has been regarded as an unequivocal challenge to authority.
His article cannot be allowed to be published on mainstream media in China. The circulation of his article must be blocked on WeChat.
This is a pity. Under Mr Wen’s leadership, China’s achieved high growth. It had just joined the World Trade Organization and was finding new economic opportunities. China had also hosted the Summer Olympics, a sort of coming out party for the country.
Hopefully, with the personal intervention of President Xi, who might look at things differently from the Chinese censors, Mr Wen’s touching article could be revived for Chinese netizens to reflect on.
Professor Bo Zhiyue is founder and president of the Bo Zhiyue China Institute, a consulting firm providing services to government leaders and CEOs of multinational corporations.
Source: CNA/sl
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