Thursday, December 13, 2007

Learn Mandarin online - A question for you, premier

BIZCHINA / Weekly Roundup

A question for you, premier
(chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2006-03-19 18:14

Hundreds of thousands of netizens posted appeals and questions to Premier
Wen Jiabao on special bulletin boards prepared by main media websites in
China in the run-up to the premier's press conference on March 14.

Premier Wen surprised his audience on the same occasion last year when he
told the press he had read an official website where people had raised
hundreds of questions for him prior to the press conference.

This time, several major Internet portals at home joined forces to
solicit questions for the premier. On one online forum alone this year,
www.xinhuanet.com, more than 2,500 people have posted their questions and
240,000 have read them. There are dozens of such websites in China.

CCTV host Wang Xiaoya raises a question for Premier Wen at the press
conference in Beijing, on March 14, 2006. [China Daily]

In addition, well-known journalists such as Hong Kong TV host Sally Wu
and CCTV host Wang Xiaoya are also soliciting questions from netizens on
their personal blogs.

Such an invitation for public involvement inspires hope for benign
interaction between the country's leaders and the general public.

Altogether, he and his cabinet received hundreds of thousands of
questions and suggestions from enthusiastic netizens, Premier Wen
disclosed at the press conference.

Most of the messages expressed concern over mainstream topics such as the
soaring prices of real estate, education and medical care, rural problems
and assessment of reform, according to messages posted online.

"I am going to have a baby, so my husband and I want to buy our own
apartment. It would be a big burden when we also have to pay for our
kid's education and medical care for our parents," said Yue Ya'er at
xinhuanet.com.

"Would you please tell me what you are going to do to make any of these
an apartment, children's education or seeing doctors more affordable?"
she asked.

There is also anxiety about finding employment.

"I am a senior college student and will graduate in July, but about
two-thirds of the students in my class, including myself, haven't found a
job," said Ruo Han at the same forum.

"Those who have rich parents are going to pursue further studies in
Europe or the United States, but what about us from ordinary families?
Can you help us?" he asked.

It is not just the more computer-savvy urbanites expressing their
concern, their relatively disadvantaged rural compatriots are also making
their voices heard.

"The county government has sold the farmland in my village and the
developer will soon pull down my house. It was built only four years ago
and we have not paid off the loan we took to build it," said a man who
called himself "Countryside Intellectual" in Northwest China's Ningxia
Hui Autonomous Region at
www.sina.com.

"I understand that you and your government are building a 'new
countryside" featuring social harmony. So I'd like to know what's your
view on the county government's move," he asked the premier.

Meanwhile, a village health worker in North China's Hebei Province said
that he wants to know more about rural medical reform, which Wen
emphasized in his speech on the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-10) days ago.

"People like me have worked for decades but cannot benefit from the
social security system when we get old. I'd like to know how the
government is going to help us," he said at www.sina.com.

But some tried to draw Mr Wen's attention to problems such as the rights
of hepatitis B patients, low salaries for soldiers, rampant corruption
among government officials who have wasted and embezzled public funds and
gay marriages as well.

The tone of most postings tended to be mild, although some could not help
using stronger language.

"Because of the rapid economic development in the east, most of the land
has been seized, and most of it illegally," one bitter message read.

"The land in the western region is of poor condition and yields poor
harvests. If this goes on, let's wait till the day when grain prices
skyrocket and by that time, we can cook and eat cash notes. Don't expect
the US and Canada to sell grain to us."

Another touched on the sensitive topic of political reform.

"If we don't accelerate political reform with all our effort, and witness
its effectiveness, even if you work to exhaustion, new problems will
arise when old problems are not yet resolved," one posting read.

Yet another asked why so many ministers and vice-ministers who had
reached retirement age were still in the cabinet.

But one netizen wasn't convinced that a temporary opportunity to express
an opinion to the premier was enough.

"Do you mind telling us your e-mail address?" the writer asked.

"I could sense the people's expectations from these comments and
proposals. I could also see the confidence and power of the general
public from those comments. Our country and our nation now stand at a new
historical turning point, " Premier Wen pointed out when saying a few
words to the general public, particularly those who surf the Internet
asking questions directly to him, at the beginning of his press
conference.

Most Popular Stories in 48 Hours

� On the ball

� China, US vow to ease trade tensions

� Nation to cut back savings rate

� China to end domestic share sales ban

� China raises yuan market prospect

Today's Top News 

� Auditors: Billions for water projects go down the drain

� 'China, US should fight protectionism'

� Man jailed for plotting to murder Bush

� 'Hillary too sexy to win White House'

Top Biz News 

� EU may slap tariff on TV makers

� Duties on shoes 'step backward'

� Shanghai VW revs up for Skoda launch

� No timetable for levy of fuel oil tax

� Gutierrez: US draws significant commerce benefits from China

Learn Mandarin online