China Premier Wen calls for political reform-Xinhua

BEIJING,  (Reuters) – China has to pursue political  reform to safeguard its economic health, Premier Wen Jiabao  said during a visit to the booming town of Shenzhen, the  official Xinhua news agency reported.

Wen’s call for political reform lacked specifics. But his  comments reflect broader worries that unless the Party embraces  at least limited reforms to make officials more answerable,  then corruption and abuses may erode the country’s economic  prospects.

“Without the safeguarding of political restructuring, China  may lose what it has already achieved through economic  restructuring and the targets of its modernisation drive might  not be reached,” Wen was quoted by Xinhua as saying.

“People’s democratic rights and legitimate rights must be  guaranteed. People should be mobilised and organised to deal  with, in accordance with the law, state, economic, social and  cultural affairs,” Wen added.

Wen also wants to “create conditions” to allow the people  to criticise and supervise the government as a way to address  “the problem of over-concentration of power with ineffective  supervision”.

Wen has developed a reputation as the member of China’s  ruling Communist Party leadership most sympathetic to relaxing  some of the country’s top-down controls.

Wen will retire as premier in early 2013. He has used  recent speeches and comments to indicate that he wants to spend  his final years in office focused on improving social welfare,  promoting more balanced and equitable economic growth, and  addressing public discontent with government.

In Shenzhen, a small village that exploded into a city of  14 million people in the last three decade, Wen said the  Shenzhen story showed that reforming and opening up to the  outside world “is the only road to achieving national  prosperity and the people’s happiness.”