Voter turnout in Tibet tops 94%: white paper
Updated: 2013-10-22 11:49
(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||
BEIJING - Voter turnout in Tibet's local elections exceeded 94 percent in 2012, says a white paper issued on Tuesday.
According to "Development and Progress of Tibet" issued by the Information Office of the State Council, deputies of Tibetan and other ethnic minorities make up the overwhelming majority in the local congresses at all levels.
Figures show that, in 2012, among the 34,244 deputies elected directly and indirectly at the levels of region, prefecture, county and village, 31,901 were from the Tibetan, Moinba, Lhoba, Naxi, Hui, Zhuang and other ethnic minorities, accounting for more than 93 percent.
People's congresses are a fundamental aspect of the political system of China. It is via the National People's Congress (NPC) and local people's congresses at different levels that the Chinese people are involved in managing state affairs and exercising state power.
Among the present NPC deputies, 20 are from the Tibet autonomous region, of whom 12 are from the Tibetan ethnic group, and one each from the Moinba and Lhoba ethnic groups, the white paper says.
Local women have seen their social status raised markedly. Female deputies make up 25.4 percent of the total at the Tibet regional people's congress, and 34.5 percent of all civil servants at all levels in Tibet.
Since the Tibet autonomous region was set up in 1965, the regional people's congress and its standing committee have made over 290 local laws and regulations, or resolutions and decisions of a legislative nature, and formulated measures for the flexible implementation of some state laws in Tibet to suit local conditions.
For example, Tibet made alternative regulations in 1981 and 2004 as marriageable ages for men and women were reduced by two years from those prescribed in the Marriage Law of the People's Republic of China. Polyandrous and polygynous relations that existed before the regulations took effect were allowed to continue if no one involved proposed dissolution of the marriage.
All Chinese citizens living in Tibet who are 18 years old or above, regardless of gender, occupation, family background, ethnicity, religious belief, educational background, financial conditions or length of residence in this region, enjoy the right to vote and the right to be elected.
- China issues white paper on Tibet's development
- Dalai Lama accused of seeking 'Tibet independence'
- Tibet to reduce poverty by 45%
- Tibet's first Western restaurant makes National Day international
- Tibet expected to witness bumper harvest
- Faces of Tibet
- Tibet gears up for new climbing season
- Tibet sets up cultural promotion association
- Tibet vows to protect world's last 'pure land'
- Teacher killed, two wounded in Nevada middle school shooting
- Smog wraps northeast, schools forced to close
- Architect looks to the big picture
- Teachers, students divided over Gaokao reform plan
- Dogfight looms over jets
- Peak season for fall foliage in Beijing
- Train carrying carrying oil, gas derails in Canada
- 30,000 turn out in Beijing Marathon
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Bribery claims feed milk scandal |
The fish that didn't get away |
Stranded in heavy snow at Qomolangma |
Riding the wave of big bargain buy-ups |
US Sinophile traces the evolution of Chinese words |
The dirt on tomb raiders |
Today's Top News
China issues white paper on Tibet's development
Building a bridge of hearts in the heartland
Hollywood must think bigger about China
Russian PM arrives in Beijing for China visit
Nation witnesses launch of luxury rental businesses
Obama vows to get healthcare website fixed
US OKs Alibaba structure
Economy to see 'good ending' in Q4
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |