China's outgoing President Hu Jintao warned that corruption could prove fatal to the Communist Party's grip on power, as he addressed the opening of a pivotal congress that will usher in a new generation of Chinese leaders.
“Opposing corruption, and building an honest and clean government is a clear stance the party has been adhering to and is an important political issue the people have been paying attention to. If we fail to handle this issue (corruption) well, it could prove fatal to the party, and even cause the collapse of the party and the fall of the state.”
Speaking to more than 2,000 delegates inside Beijing's ornate Great Hall of the People, President Hu said the party “must make sure that all are equal before the law.”
He did not mention ousted senior politician Bo Xilai, who has been accused of taking massive bribes and covering up his wife's involvement in the murder of a British businessman. The case has exposed high-level corruption and revealed deep rifts within the party.
During the week-long 18th Party Congress, Mr. Hu is expected step down as party chief and hand the position to Vice President Xi Jinping, who will take over as president in March. The new leaders will face unprecedented public anger over worsening official corruption and a widening gap between rich and poor.
Security was tight in central Beijing as the congress began.
Next door to the congress venue, police moved in quickly early Thursday to stop a screaming protester in the heavily guarded Tiananmen Square. Hundreds of activists have already been placed under house arrest or kept out of the capital.
The city's taxi drivers have been told to disable their rear windows in a bid to stop passengers from distributing political material, while firefighters resolutely stood guard in Tiananmen Square, an apparent effort to stop any would-be self-immolators.
Even as authorities cracked down on dissent, President Hu made promises of political reform.
“Reform of the political structure is an important part of China's overall reform. We must continue to make both active and prudent efforts to carry out the reform of the political structure and make people's democracy more extensive, fuller in scope, and sounder in practice.”
But he called on the people and their leaders to “march on the path of socialism with Chinese characteristics,” vowing that China would never copy a Western political system.
Steven Lewis, a China scholar with Houston's Rice University, tells VOA Chinese leaders know they must make political reforms to prevent more protests that have resulted from a series of economic and environmental concerns.
“I think it's a very broad consensus that the government and the party need to be including more people in decision-making and that also if they want the Chinese population to be working with their policies, they've got to persuade them better, and that means including more voices, including more decisions and trying to be more popular.”
President Hu's 90-minute speech also stressed the need for a new model of economic growth in China, which has experienced slowing after decades of rapid expansion. He said China's development should be “much more balanced, coordinated, and sustainable,”
He set a goal of doubling the 2010 GDP and per capita income by 2020 – a goal that Beijing-based business professor Patrick Chovanec says should not be very difficult to achieve.
“The goal of doubling GDP by 2020 sounds very impressive, but it actually equates to a 7 percent growth rate, which is significantly lower than people have been accustomed to. So I think it's actually trying to lower expectations quite a bit.”
But Mr. Hu spoke most urgently on the need to battle corruption, telling delegates that they should “exercise strict self-discipline and strengthen supervision over their families and staff.” He said all those who break state and party laws, regardless of their position, “must be brought to justice without mercy.”