He ate dumplings with coal miners 720 meters
underground on the eve of the Chinese Lunar New Year, held
an umbrella in the rain to comfort flood victims and went to
visit farmers at work in the fields to gather information on
the current agriculture situation first-hand.
Wen
Jiabao, 60, won overwhelming endorsement yesterday for his
appointment as premier from nearly 3,000 deputies of the
10th National People's Congress (NPC).
His
man-of-the-people manner and down-to-earth touch has
impressed many officials as well as NPC deputies.
"He works very diligently and has always visited
those at the grass roots to do investigations and
research," said Zhao Chunming, former executive deputy
director of the Office of the State Flood Control and
Drought Relief Headquarters, who joined Wen on several
inspection tours.
Tight Schedule
When Wen was
vice premier, he was in charge of works related to
agriculture, flood-control and finance.
"Wen's
working schedule was always very packed -- day and
night," Zhao said, recalling Wen's inspection and
visits.
He usually visited flood-control projects
during the day and held meetings with local officials at
night to learn as much as possible about the situation from
the grass roots, according to Zhao.
"During
those trips, Wen never spent more than 20 minutes dining and
always insisted that the food be very simple," said
Zhao in an interview with China Daily.
When handling
problems with flood control, which is high-risk work, Wen
would listen to the opinions of experts, but make the final
decisions himself, said Zhao.
"I was deeply
impressed by Wen's ability to guide agricultural work and
analyze the situation from daily work," said NPC deputy
Wang Shouchen, who is director of the Agricultural
Commission of Jilin Province.
Wang, who accompanied
Wen during his visit to Jilin in May 1998, said that Wen did
not follow the routes arranged by local officials.
He
visited here and there to chat with local farmers to learn
of the true conditions.
He said that Wen has played
an important role in pushing China's tax reform forward in
rural areas, which is now being conducted in 20 provinces
and autonomous regions across the country and has benefited
a large number of farmers.
Another NPC deputy Yang
Weize -- also mayor of Suzhou in East China's Jiangsu
Province -- said that Wen's expertise in agriculture and
finance are helpful for the new government to build China
into a materially and socially well-off society.
When
Wen visited Jiangsu in September 2001 to investigate methods
of treating Taihu Lake's polluted water, Yang was at Wen's
side.
Wen urged local officials to attach importance
to improving the environmental conditions in Jiangnan --
regions south of the Yangtze River -- by citing a poem With
Memory of Jiangnan written by Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907) poet
Bai Juyi (AD 772-846).
"We were impressed by his
scholastic charisma," recalled Yang.
Born in
1942 in an alley in Tianjin, Wen enrolled in Beijing
Geological Institute in 1960, where he studied geological
surveying and mineral prospecting.
After graduating
with a master's degree in structural geology in 1968, he
chose to lead the hard life of a geologist in Gansu.
For 11 years of his youth, Wen traveled the mountain
ranges of Northwest China's Gansu Province as a technician
and then deputy head of a geological prospecting team.
On one trip, his team encountered mountain torrents,
and they had to move their tents three times in one night,
according to his former colleagues.
Today his former
colleagues in the Gansu Geological and Mining Bureau still
remember the "good-tempered young man who loves
reading."
It was then in Gansu that Wen fell in
love with Zhang Peili, his colleague. The young woman was a
graduate from the Geological Department of Lanzhou
University, Gansu. The two got married in the 1970s.
In the following years Wen worked in the Gansu
Geology and Mining Bureau, the Ministry of Geology and
Mining and the Central Committee of the Communist Party of
China (CPC).
In 1998 he was elected vice premier of
the State Council. Today, Wen lives with his family in a
simple apartment in downtown Beijing.
Special New
Year's Eve
"I didn't recognize Vice Premier Wen
at first glance and thought he was a mining expert who came
down to guide our work," said Liu Yi, a miner of Fuxin
Coal Group in Northeast China's Liaoning Province, as he
recalled his encounter with Wen 720 meters underground in a
coal mine on January 31.
Wen was visiting the coal
miners at work on the Chinese New Year's eve.
"It was dinner time.
"The
'expert' sat down among us, on the rails deep in the mine,
and had a box of jiaozi (dumplings) together with us.
Someone told me who he was, and we chatted for almost two
hours about mine safety and laid-off workers. It was
wonderful," Liu recalled.
In 2000, Wen visited
Fengning County, North China's Hebei Province, which was
then suffering from a severe drought.
The local
officials who accompanied him once again noted that he
refused the arranged route at all. He stopped, here and
there, talked with farmers in the fields and visited their
houses to see the actual situation of rural life.
During a three-month period in 1998, he travelled
five times to Jiujiang, East China's Jiangxi Province, the
frontline of the battle against floods.
He visited
armies and local residents standing fast on the dam, helped
settle flood victims and made plans with hydraulic engineers
and government officials to cope with the problem.
At
the critical moment when the most important dam of the
Yangtze River was breached and Wuhan, the capital of Central
China's Hubei Province, was threatened by floods, many urged
Wen to blow up the Jingjiang Dam, which would have flooded
vast rural areas, to protect Wuhan.
Wen, after
consulting with hydraulic engineers, decided to defend both
the Jingjiang Dam and Wuhan. The decision proved right.
"During the battle against floods in 1998, we
discovered that Wen can inspire people in desperate
conditions and he can quickly evaluate the source of a
problem.
"His sharp insight lead to the
punishment of a group of government officials who were
derelict of their duties," said an official with the
Hubei Flood-control Headquarters, who declined to give his
name.
With his affinity to the common people, Wen
does not have to depend on government statistics to do his
work.
"Wen has the ability to govern the
over-all situation and is good at handling issues from a
strategical point of view," said NPC Deputy Wang
Shouchun, who gave a supporting vote to Wen.
(China
Daily March 17, 2003)