Binzhou

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

滨州市
Bīnzhōu Shì
Binzhou is highlighted on this map
Administration Type Prefecture-level city
City Seat Bincheng District
(37°22′N 118°0′E)
Area 9,444.65 km²
Coastline
Population 3,661,500 (2003) city estimated in 2006 at 116,573.
GDP
- Total
- Per Capita
 
¥
¥
Major Nationalities Han, Hui
County-level divisions 7
Township-level divisions
CPC Committee Secretary
Mayor 安世银AN Shi Yin
Area code 543
Postal Code 256600
(Bincheng District)
251700-251900, 256200, 256500, 256800
(Other areas)
License Plate Prefix 鲁M

Binzhou (Chinese: 滨州; pinyin: Bīnzhōu) is a prefecture-level city in northern Shandong province, People's Republic of China. Sitting on the northern bank of the Yellow River with two arms extended to the southern bank, Binzhou borders the provincial capital of Jinan to the southwest, Dezhou to the west, Zibo to the south, Dongying to the east, and the province of Hebei to the north. The city also has a short coastline bordering the Bohai Bay.

Contents

The prefecture-level city of Binzhou administers 7 county-level divisions, including 1 district and 6 counties.

  • Bincheng District (滨城区)
  • Zouping County (邹平县)
  • Boxing County (博兴县)
  • Huimin County (惠民县)
  • Yangxin County (阳信县)
  • Zhanhua County (沾化县)
  • Wudi County (无棣县)

In 2004, the Binzhou government implemented Democratic Political Discussion Day, held on the 5th of each month. Under this scheme, every village-level government on this day is required to hold "open debate" and conference for villagers (essentially a town hall). At these meetings, a monthly finanical report is presented, highlighting past and planned expenditure, investment performance and such other financial information. In theory, this is suppose to open village finances to greater public scrutiny and debate. Also released at these meetings are reports on the past performance of the government and governmental officials, and future actions and decisions planned, and just like the financial reports, these are also under the public scrutiny and debate. The resulting event is a secret ballot for every villager to vote for everything discussed at these meetings and governments cannot proceed on any issues unless they are passed with a majority vote. The issues passed by popular vote would then be carried out, and at the same time, the government would also make improvement and adjustment on the policies and issues that did not pass, and then present the revisions for the public scrutiny and debate at the next meeting.

Ever since the implementation of the political reform at Binzhou, the policy and performance have become transparent and obvious, corruption was checked, cadres' performance and popular support increased, and economy has steadily developed. The letters of petition from villagers to the government reduced more than 30%, and more importantly, in comparison to the era prior to the implementation of the political reform where over 90% of the petitions were criticism and complaints, over 90% of the petition after the implementation of the political reform was suggestions for improvement and requests for assistance.

The obvious achievement of the political reform of Binzhou is widely reported in the domestic Chinese media, as well as many overseas Chinese media, such as Zhong Guo Daily News in Southern California, or its more commonly known Chinese name among local Chinese readers, China Daily (Not to be confused China Daily, the official English publication of Chinese government), and is termed by both domestic and overseas scholars as a good example for governments in other parts of China to follow, and along with Chinese media, they have urged authorities to slowly but steadily expand the reform to a greater scale.

However, like many other similar small successes of political reforms in China, this one is willfully and carefully ignored in the west, as none of such improvements are reported in the major western media, because the western conservatives such as the Blue Team and their supporters always dismiss such improvement as communist propaganda and believed that Chinese government is never capable of making any progress like this. Such balant racism only serve to strength the Chinese nationalism as many scholars have accurately pointed out, because in the eyes of Chinese, the western conservatives' action is no different than the Ku Klux Klan and other racists' belief of minorities would always be inferior. Overseas scholars (as well as domestic Chinese scholars) have also accurately pointed out that in order for the western media to help push for further political reforms in China, unbiased, and honest reporting of small progress should be reported despite how tiny it might be, instead of constant China-bashing, but so far, only overseas Chinese media managed to do so, as reflected in this incident, while the majority of the western media has not done so.


Prefecture-level divisions of Shandong
Sub-provincial cities: Jinan | Qingdao
Prefecture-level cities: Binzhou | Dezhou | Dongying | Heze | Jining | Laiwu | Liaocheng
Linyi | Rizhao | Tai'an | Weifang | Weihai | Yantai | Zaozhuang | Zibo
List of Shandong County-level divisions


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