Former Chinese president Hu Jintao was unexpectedly led out of Saturday’s closing ceremony of the Communist Party Congress, AFP journalists on the scene witnessed.
The frail-looking Hu, 79, initially seemed reluctant to leave the front row of Politburo Standing Committee members in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, where he was sitting next to President Xi Jinping.
He had brief exchanges with Xi and Premier Li Keqiang after stewards spoke with him. A steward, holding Hu’s arm, led the former president out.
Hu patted Li’s shoulder as he left. His departure was not explained. Hu, who retired in 2013, appeared at last Sunday’s Congress opening with his hair completely grey.
Xi, 69, is widely expected to be reaffirmed this weekend as the Party’s General Secretary, paving the way for him to gain a norm-breaking third term as Chinese president next March.
The new Central Committee of around 200 senior Party officials was elected shortly after 11am Saturday, state media agency Xinhua reported, without disclosing a full list of members
(unheard dialog?)
Aide: Sir, you have to go.
Hu: I don't want to go. You're gonna whack me. Here, let me look at this agenda. I'm on board!!!
Xi: No. I don't think so. Suck it up, man.
Aide: Yes, we're gonna whack you. But it will be better for your family if you come along quietly. You know how it rolls.
Xi: (unspoken) You're out. Them's the breaks. Now, you break.
Hu, leaving: Xi, is this real man? What th'?
Xi: Yep. Them's the breaks.
Hu, to Li: So long, bro.
Li: Too bad. Them's the breaks.
Sitting CCP Officials: (unspoken) He's out. F*cksake glad it's not me. Now, watch me being devoid of expression. No way! do I side with this traitor. I'm a good boy.
Sitting CCP Officials all: (unspoken) We know how it rolls. That's one dead motherf*cker. But, you'll see no sympathy from us. We're all good boys.
Poll: Over 80% of Americans See China as a Human Rights, Economy, Military Problem
Gallup also detected a pronounced shift in Americans’ attitudes toward China when it ran a poll in March, around the same time as the previous Pew poll. Gallup found the number of Americans who viewed China as their “greatest enemy” more than doubled over the preceding year, even as the Wuhan coronavirus pandemic was receding. Poll analysts suspected the economic damage inflicted to the Western world by the coronavirus could have made the public more conscious of China’s economic power and aggression. Source: breitbart.com