Infection blamed for top Chinese lawmaker’s absence from key Parliament session

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FILE PHOTO: Chinese co-chair Zhao Leji, Member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee attends the High-Level Meeting on State Governance during the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) summit at the national convention center in Beijing, China September 5, 2024.    ADEK BERRY/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

Mr Zhao did not attend the closing session of China's national political advisory body.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- The third-ranked leader of China’s ruling Communist Party was absent on March 11 from a key parliamentary session he had been due to open, with his stand-in attributing the absence to a respiratory infection.

Mr Zhao Leji, 68, was not among the senior party leaders in the Great Hall of the People, the first time in almost two decades that a member of the Politburo Standing Committee, the party’s top echelon, was not at the high-profile political event.

“Chairman

Zhao Leji

requested leave from this afternoon’s meeting due to a respiratory infection,” said vice-chairman of the National People’s Congress (NPC) Standing Committee Li Hongzhong as he opened the plenary session in the Chinese capital.

“I was entrusted... to preside,” he told more than 2,000 delegates gathered in the hall’s main auditorium for the parliamentary meetings, set to conclude on March 11.

The public announcement was a departure from the Communist Party’s customary secrecy about the health of its senior leaders.

“It’s certainly unusual for China’s NPC speaker to miss the single most important occasion of the year,” said Mr Wen-Ti Sung, an analyst of Chinese politics at the Atlantic Council’s Global China Hub. “This kind of occurrence is extremely rare.”

Mr Zhao did not attend either the closing session of China's national political advisory body or the third meeting of the presidium of the NPC, both on March 10, state media said, with no reason given for his absence.

Until then, Mr Zhao, a confidant of President Xi Jinping who served five years as the head of the Communist Party’s anti-corruption watchdog, had attended all his scheduled public meetings, state media summaries showed.

Mr Zhao’s portrait still appears on the NPC website.

While there is no official suggestion that Mr Zhao’s absence is caused by anything other than illness, China’s former foreign minister Qin Gang missed a 2023 diplomatic summit in Indonesia on account of unspecified “health reasons”, a foreign ministry spokesperson said at the time.

He was later ousted from his job after a mysterious one-month absence from duties, allegedly due to an extramarital affair.

Mr Li, Mr Zhao’s deputy, was “entrusted” to chair the meeting of the presidium or executive committee on March 10, the official People’s Daily newspaper said.

Mr Li, 68, sits on the 24-member Politburo, the party’s second-highest rung of power.

A member of the Politburo Standing Committee has not missed a major NPC plenary session since 2006, when former vice-premier Huang Ju missed all the annual Parliament sessions because he was ill in hospital, a government spokesperson said at the time.

Mr Huang, who was China’s sixth-ranking leader, died in 2007, but the authorities gave no cause of death.

The Communist Party almost never divulges details of the health of top leaders or addresses concerns about their age, making it difficult for analysts to track political dynamics.

All leaders in the Politburo Standing Committee except Mr Xi and Vice-Premier Ding Xuexiang, 62, are expected to retire in 2027, when the next Communist Party leadership reshuffle is due.

Mr Zhao was absent from a January 2022 study session of the 24-member Politburo chaired by Mr Xi, state media footage showed.

No reason was given for his absence and state media did not list those who attended.

In 2022, Mr Xi’s immediate predecessor, Mr Hu Jintao, was unexpectedly escorted out of the Great Hall of the People by two stewards during the closing ceremony of the previous Communist Party congress.

He was “not feeling well” and had recently taken time to “recuperate”, state media said at the time.

The incident was highly unusual, given the meticulous stage management of such events.

Video footage was widely shared on Twitter but did not appear on China’s heavily censored social media.

Besides chairing China’s national Parliament, Mr Zhao heads the standing committee, which meets every two months to review drafts of new legislation and approve personnel decisions.

On March 7, Mr Zhao delivered an annual report on China’s legislative work at the second plenary session of the NPC, also held in the Great Hall.

He attended the March 5 opening session of Parliament and met NPC delegates from the south-western province of Sichuan that day, state media said.

For decades, Mr Zhao climbed the Party ranks in his native province of Qinghai in the north-west before being transferred to Shaanxi province in 2007, where Mr Xi has strong personal and family connections.

He then headed the party’s Central Organisation Department overseeing personnel appointments and promotions, before taking the role of top disciplinary chief.

In his current role, Mr Zhao meets regularly with visiting foreign lawmakers, including the speaker of South Korea’s Parliament, Mr Woo Won-shik, in February.

He led a Chinese delegation to North Korea on a goodwill visit in 2024, becoming the most senior Chinese leader to visit the country since 2018. REUTERS

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