Jia Qinglin Updated: 2004-06-25 13:49
Jia Qinglin, a member of the top decision-making body of the Communist Party
of China (CPC), was elected new head of China's political advisory body, the
Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).
Jia, who entered the nine-member Standing Committee of the Political Bureau
of the CPC Central Committee at the first plenum of the 16th CPC Central
Committee four months ago, succeeded Li Ruihuan as chairman of the 10th CPPCC
National Committee.
With the participation of the CPC, eight non-Communist parties and personages
with no party affiliation, the CPPCC is regarded as the best representation of
China's "broadest patriotic united front". The CPC has called the united front
one of the three "magic weapons" contributing to its past successes.
Many see Jia as a qualified leader of the CPPCC, as his first major
assignment as a senior Party official was deputy Party secretary of southeast
China's coastal province of Fujian, the ancestral home to numerous Taiwan
residents and overseas Chinese.
A native of north China's Hebei province, Jia was born in March 1940 in
Qingdao city of east China's Shandong province. After graduating from the Hebei
Engineering College in 1962, he came to Beijing and worked in the former First
Ministry of Machine-Building Industry as a technician. He was appointed general
manager of China National Machinery and Equipment Import and Export Corporation
in 1978, and became manager of the Taiyuan Heavy Machinery Plant in north
China's Shanxi province in 1983.
Jia devoted more than two decades of the prime time in his life to the
development of China's machine-building industry.
In 1985, Jia was dispatched to work in Fujian and stayed there for 11 years,
serving successively as deputy secretary of the CPC Fujian Provincial Committee,
the provincial governor, and Party chief of Fujian.
In his tenure, Jia attached great importance to the united front work and
earnestly implemented the Party's policies concerning the overseas Chinese.
Thanks to Jia's efforts to befriend the overseas Chinese and win their hearts,
many overseas Chinese had invested in Fujian and contributed greatly to the
local economic development. He also did a lot of work to strengthen ties between
people of Fujian and Taiwan.
In October 1996, Jia returned to Beijing and served successively as acting
mayor, mayor and Party chief of the capital city.
Jia was the one who put forth a high-tech-based "capital economy" concept and
development strategy, which he believes would help bring into full play
Beijing's unique advantages in education, science and technology, human
resources, and information.
When Jia was transferred to work in the CPC Central Committee in October
2002, Beijing's financial revenues had risen to 53.4 billion RMB yuan (6.4
billion US dollars) from 18.23 billion yuan (2.2 billion dollars) in 1997, and
the city's annual per-capita GDP (gross domestic product) had reached 3,355
dollars. The new and high-tech industry, spearheaded by the rapidly-growing
Zhongguancun Sci-Tech Garden in northwestern Beijing, had contributed nearly 70
percent of the city's overall industrial growth, indicating a major improvement
in local industrial structure.
In a display of his down-to-earth style of work, Jia visited grassroots units
and local households for as many as 267 times in his six-year tenure in Beijing,
mostly on the weekends and in all weathers, to learn the actual situation in the
city. With a deep affection toward the common people, he frequently went to the
homes of local needy residents, many of whom lived in worn-out and unsafe
buildings, to listen to their problems and convey the concerns of the Party and
the government. In six years he paid 11 visits to the Niujie area alone, a
traditional Muslim neighborhood in the capital, to help shoot troubles for the
local people.
When he was in office, Jia also required the Municipal Party Committee and
the Municipal Government to do 60 "concrete things" directly linked to the
interests of the general public every year. In five years, a total of 648,000
new jobs were created in Beijing, while most worn-out and unsafe buildings in
the old city proper were renovated or rebuilt, bringing the per-capita housing
space for the urban residents up to 18 square meters.
Jia and his colleagues pursued a human-centered course in urban construction
and strove to turn Beijing into a city with a blue sky, clear water, broad roads
and plenty of greenland. By 2002, Beijing residents had been able to enjoy a
good air quality for 203 days of a year. Major progress was also made in
afforesting the city's outskirts and in clearing and desilting local waterways,
while the unique scenery of Beijing as an ancient capital was well preserved.
As head of the leading group for Beijing's 2008 Olympic bid, Jia played a key
role in bringing the 2008 Olympic Games to the Chinese capital. After designing
and carrying out a successful bidding strategy along with his colleagues, Jia
also initiated the idea of "New Beijing, New Olympics", which many believe would
guide Beijing's development in a new stage.
With an outstanding capability to command the overall situationin a highly
complicated circumstance, Jia is quick to put forward feasible ideas and
policies with a creative thinking, and help usher in a brand new situation for
reform and development, sources said.
A typical man of the north China origin, Jia is known for his modesty and
prudence. Sources close to him say that he is always strict with himself but
tolerant of the others, and is easy to approach.
Those who had worked with him said that they were often impressed by Jia's
superb ability to unite with people around him and to appreciate a person's
capability and always assign the person to the most appropriate job.
Owing to his excellent skills for mobilizing all positive factors and
combining the efforts of all people, local officials say, Beijing has ushered in
an exciting new situation, with citizens concentrating on development and
working hard to seize every opportunity.
The united front work remained a focus of attention for Jia while he served
in Beijing. Actually, many of the leaders of China's eight non-Communist
parties, as well as noted figures in the religious and non-Communist circles,
regarded him as their "bosom friend".
After he became a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of
the CPC Central Committee, Jia immediately started to busy himself with affairs
related to the united front work across the country and made an in-depth study
of China's non-Communist parties.
In late December last year, Jia accompanied Hu Jintao, general secretary of
the CPC Central Committee, to visit the eight non-Communist parties and the
All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce. Shortly after this year's Spring
Festival, or the Chinese Lunar New Year which fell in February, he also paid
visits to various religious groups and met with the country's prominent
religious figures, such as the 11th Panchen Lama from Tibet.
"The system of multi-party cooperation and political consultation led by the
CPC is our country's basic political system, which we will always adhere to
regardless of any possible difficulties and troubles," Jia repeatedly told the
non-Communist figures he met.
Many non-Communist figures said afterward that these visits once again
convinced them of the CPC's attitude of "treating each other with all sincerity
and sharing weal and woe" in developing relations with non-Communist parties and
organizations.
As many of his fellow Party members, Jia, a veteran Communist with a 43-year
Party standing, tended to attribute all his achievements to the Party and the
people. He often says: "I caught up with the good times in my six years of work
in Beijing."
Jia and his wife Lin Youfang, a classmate of his in the college years, have a
son and a daughter. Lin, who returned to Beijing in early 1997 after retirement,
is now leading a happy housewife's life.
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