Latest News:  

English>>China Politics

China Voice: 'Beautiful China' campaign needs administrative awe

(Xinhua)

18:04, March 13, 2013

The momentous campaign of "beautiful China" by the country's new leadership must be given more power in terms of administration to ensure it is put in practice by local governments.

Talks about building a beautiful country have been heated in the past few months and again during the ongoing annual parliamentary session, but they can only remain empty if no concrete measures are taken to make it a compulsory index in assessing the performance of local officials.

It is widely agreed by Chinese people that a "beautiful China" is one with blue sky and clear rivers, but in reality the sky is often shrouded by smog and rivers are polluted.

After three decades or so of continuous high economic growth, mostly achieved through labor-intensive manufacturing, accumulated environmental problems have finally broken out in recent years and public complaints have become more audible.

The latest appalling example of pollution came from the metropolis of Shanghai where authorities had collected nearly 6,000 dead pigs as of Tuesday that were found floating on the Huangpu River, the major source of drinking water for the city of more than 20 million people.

Other daunting environmental problems include the heavy smog that has shrouded large parts of the country several times this winter, forcing local residents to put on masks or even stay indoors to avoid respiratory infection.

Undoubtedly, some businesses and people should be blamed for the lack of social responsibility as they have failed to observe environmental rules, but more blame lies in the governments at different levels for their often loose policies and insufficient supervision.

Had some local governments not pursued GDP growth rate as their almost single target of work, factories that did not meet the standards on industrial waste discharge would not have had the chance to blossom across the country.

Moreover, if the governments had exercised stricter supervision and taken in public complaints more readily, environmental hazards would not have lingered in some areas and even prompted local residents to protest on the streets.

It is now imperative to make local governments and officials understand that economic growth must not be achieved at the cost of environmental health.

Only by making environmental protection more important than simple GDP growth figures in evaluating officials' performances can they have the motive to shut down heavily-polluting but mostly profitable and tax-paying factories.

This is where the top legislature can play a large role by making the change into law and ensure objective evaluation of local governments' work, where both official and public supervision are vital.

Only when officials know the weight of supervision and the political cost of their environmental negligence, will they truly become aware of the importance of green development over GDP growth.

We Recommend:

Review: 12th CPPCC National Committee opens

Review: News conference on new CPPCC session

CPPCC members arrive for opening session

A beautiful China also world's common desire

China's reform roadmap gets clearer

Japan warned not to cause friction with China

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:LiXiang、Chen Lidan)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Naval escort taskforce in anti-hijack exercise

  2. Armored regiment in live-ammunition drill

  3. Kim Jong Un visits Defence Detachment

  4. China's five-decade efforts of turning green

  5. 2,800 dead pigs found in Shanghai river

  6. Modern life of Chinese elderly

  7. Is it cute or scary?

  8. Nature's nirvana

  9. Boeing 787 plan for battery fix approved

  10. China's fiscal policy over past 5 years

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Efforts needed to nurture ethnic culture, language
  2. Filipina maids or local ayi?
  3. China won't take part in currency wars
  4. Long live the kingdom of bicycles!
  5. Income gap still hot topic
  6. Bigger does not always mean better for megacities
  7. Railway ministry revamp will not impact ratings
  8. Active yet prudent urbanization needed for China
  9. China's dating TV show inspires copycat in Chicago
  10. Int'l influence of Chinese films improving

What’s happening in China

14 killed, 9 injured in central China traffic accident

  1. Man who kept sex slave detained
  2. Caring for families that lost their only child
  3. Ministry's surrogacy crackdown to continue
  4. Beijing subway overtakes Moscow as busiest
  5. High-end restaurant forced to drop prices