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People & Points
Print Edition> People & Points
UPDATED: September 7, 2007 NO.37 SEP.13, 2007
Another Turn at the Wheel
Comrade Meng Xuenong has rich experience in government work and a strong sense of innovation
 
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In a recent reshuffle of the local government of Shanxi, Meng Xuenong, who resigned from the post of Beijing mayor for his government's mishandling of the SARS outbreak in 2003 and disappeared from the political stage, has resurfaced as chief administrative officer of this coal-rich province in north China.

Meng, 58, was appointed acting governor of Shanxi by the local legislature on September 3, replacing Yu Youjun.

Meng now presides over China's largest coal-producing region, whose output was 580 million tons last year, and a transitional economy that hopes to reduce its exploitation of natural resources.

In a speech after his appointment was approved, Meng listed his priorities as pushing forward Shanxi's economic and social development and building an efficient and clean government. He also pledged bigger efforts to optimize Shanxi's investment environment and accelerate the transformation of the local development mode to a resource- and environment-friendly one.

Meng is under pressure to continue his predecessor's efforts to repair Shanxi's tainted image after the exposure of a slave labor scandal in the province's unlicensed brick kilns, involving 359 victims. In the crackdown to slavery earlier this year, 60 criminals involved with this case were given prison terms and 95 officials were disciplined for dereliction of duty.

Thanks to the booming coal mining industry, since 2002 Shanxi's economy has maintained a strong momentum in the past five years, when its gross domestic product jumped from 29 billion yuan (about $3.49 billion) to 104.8 billion yuan (about $13.15 billion), leading the country in terms of the growth rate of fiscal revenues.

However, frequent safety accidents in mines and worsening pollution amid the rapid development of coal-related chemical enterprises are posing a big challenge to local leadership.

Meng was elected mayor of Beijing in January 2003 and resigned in April the same year. Between September 2003 and August 2007, he was deputy head of a committee under the State Council, China's cabinet, which oversees an ambitious project to divert water from the country's humid south to arid north. His election to the post of Shanxi governor is expected to take place at the full session of the local legislature later this year or in early 2008.

“Comrade Meng Xuenong has rich experience in government work and a strong sense of innovation.”

Xinhua News Agency’s report on Meng’s transfer to Shanxi, quoting

Li Jianhua, Vice Minister of Organization Department of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China

“I’m like a seed to be sown into the fertile soil of Shanxi.”

Meng Xuenong, expressing his determination to integrate with locals after being appointed as acting governor of Shanxi

"We are moving from a country that keeps its secrets in the interests of security, to one that shares them in the interests of security."

Shen Dingli, professor at Shanghai's Fudan University, quoted by Agence France-Presse commenting on China's participation in the United Nations Military Transparency Mechanism and its resumption of providing the requested data for the UN Register of Conventional Arms starting from this year

"If the security situation continues to improve as it has, we may be able to achieve the same objectives with fewer troops."

U.S. President George W. Bush, speaking to reporters after a surprise visit to Iraq on September 3

"We showed clear willingness to declare and dismantle all nuclear facilities."

North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Gye Gwan, speaking to reporters after concluding two-day talks with U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill in Geneva on September 2

"The Gaz de France and Suez deal shows that the European Commission's plans to really open the internal market to ompetition in the energy sector is going nowhere."

Christian Egenhofer, energy analyst at the Center for European Policy

Studies, a research group in Brussels, commenting on the merger of the French state-owned natural gas company Gaz de France and the utility Suez, which will create one of the world's largest energy groups

"I have been very lucky to be able to do what I have loved all my life."

Legendary Italian designer Valentino, at his retirement on September 4



 
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