Current:Home > InvestCrowds gather near state funeral home as China’s former Premier Li Keqiang is being put to rest -ProfitSphere Academy
Crowds gather near state funeral home as China’s former Premier Li Keqiang is being put to rest
View
Date:2025-04-15 21:29:06
BEIJING (AP) — Hundreds, possibly thousands, of people gathered near a state funeral home Thursday as former Premier Li Keqiang was being put to rest.
In front of the funeral home, plainclothes and uniformed police lined the roadway for hundreds of meters (yards), blocking traffic and telling people to move along and watching for the presence of any unofficial or foreign media. Police also moved people away from a subway station near the Babaoshan cemetery where state funerals are held and many top leaders are buried.
Flags, including the nation’s most famous standard that flies over Tiananmen Square in the heart of the Chinese capital, were lowered to half-staff at government and party offices around the country and at Chinese embassies and consulates abroad.
Li died last Friday of a heart attack at age 68. State media had said he would be cremated Thursday but didn’t mention funeral plans. According to precedent, retired high-level officials usually lie in state briefly as top leaders pass the body and offer wreaths of white flowers, the traditional color of mourning.
Li was China’s No. 2 leader and helped guide China’s economy for a decade before being dropped from the Communist Party’s all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee in October 2022. He left office in March 2023, despite being two years below the informal retirement age of 70.
Though his time in office was marked by numerous crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic and Li showed little zeal for reform, he was seen as an alternative to increasingly authoritarian party leader Xi Jinping. Li was left with little authority after Xi made himself the most powerful Chinese leader in decades and tightened control over the economy and society.
Xi awarded himself a third five-year term as party leader and filled the top party ranks with loyalists. The No. 2 slot was filled by Li Qiang, the party secretary for Shanghai, who lacked Li Keqiang’s national-level experience and later told reporters that his job was to do whatever Xi decided.
veryGood! (4433)
Related
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Khloe Kardashian Unveils New Photo of Her Growing Baby Boy
- Trump Weakens Endangered Species Protections, Making It Harder to Consider Effects of Climate Change
- Why Vanderpump Rules' Lala Kent and Scheana Shay's Bond Over Motherhood Is as Good as Gold
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- EPA’s ‘Secret Science’ Rule Meets with an Outpouring of Protest on Last Day for Public Comment
- Hostage freed after years in Africa recounts ordeal and frustrations with U.S. response
- Sun's out, ticks out. Lyme disease-carrying bloodsucker season is getting longer
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- The Politics Of Involuntary Commitment
Ranking
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- How to show up for teens when big emotions arise
- Wheeler in Wisconsin: Putting a Green Veneer on the Actions of Trump’s EPA
- Trump Administration OK’s Its First Arctic Offshore Drilling Plan
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Out-of-staters are flocking to places where abortions are easier to get
- Transcript: Former Attorney General William Barr on Face the Nation, June 18, 2023
- IPCC Report Shows Food System Overhaul Needed to Save the Climate
Recommendation
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Gemini Shoppable Horoscope: 11 Birthday Gifts The Air Sign Will Love
These Amazon Travel Essentials Will Help You Stick To Your Daily Routine on Vacation
Biden administration says fentanyl-xylazine cocktail is a deadly national threat
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
You're less likely to get long COVID after a second infection than a first
Today's election could weaken conservatives' long-held advantage in Wisconsin
A smart move on tax day: Sign up for health insurance using your state's tax forms