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China Ex-Premier Li Keqiang Dies At 68

He was the only incumbent top official who didn’t belong to Mr Xi’s loyalists group.

Former Chinese premier Li Keqiang has died of a heart attack aged 68. State media said he died at 10 minutes past midnight on Friday despite “all-out” efforts to revive him.

Li was once tipped to be the country’s future leader but was overtaken by President Xi Jinping. A trained economist, he held the second highest-ranked position in China, though in recent years, he was widely isolated amongst China’s top leadership.

He was the only incumbent top official who didn’t belong to Mr Xi’s loyalists group. “Li’s death means the loss of a prominent moderating voice within the senior levels of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), with no one apparently being able to take over the mantle,” Ian Chong, non resident scholar at the Carnegie China think tank told the BBC.

“This probably means even less restraint on Mr Xi’s exercise of power and authority.” Li, who had stepped down as premier in March this year, suffered a sudden heart attack on Thursday and died early on Friday while he was in Shanghai.

His death is being widely mourned on Chinese social media, with many expressing shock and grief – though comments on many posts appear to have been restricted.

“This is too sudden, he was so young,” said one user on Chinese social media site Weibo. Another said his death was like losing “a pillar of our home”.

Reports of Li’s death have also appeared in state media, in which his contribution to the CCP and the country are recognised.

Deaths of former Chinese leaders have triggered protests in the past. An outpouring of mourning during Jiang Zemin’s death last year was seen as a subtle criticism of President Xi.

Li was known as one of the smartest political figures of his generation. He was accepted into the prestigious Peking University Law School soon after the universities were reopened following Mao’s Cultural Revolution during which millions of people are believed to have died.

He is best known outside of China for the Li Keqiang index, a term coined by The Economist as an informal measurement of China’s economic progress.

Source: BBC

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