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Premier Li Keqiang has the spotlight but Wang Qishan is the centre of attention

China’s former anti-graft tsar does not have a title but that did not stop the good and the great lining up to pay homage

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General Fan Changlong salutes former anti-graft tsar Wang Qishan as he leaves after the opening session of the National People's Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Monday. Photo: Reuters

The premier was on the podium but at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Monday all eyes were on China’s former anti-graft tsar.

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As the imposing head of the party’s anticorruption watchdog, Wang Qishan cut a swathe through officialdom, and on Monday, as Premier Li Keqiang listed the government’s achievements of the last five years, Wang cut a commanding figure, with the Communist Party elite lining up to shake the hand of the man who would be vice-president.

The moment Li’s speech was over, outgoing Vice-Premier Liu Yandong was the first to leap to her feet, bypassing fellow Vice-Premier Ma Kai to beat a path to Wang, her colleague on the State Council under the previous administration.

Waiting in the wings to press the flesh was General Fan Changlong, the top professional officer with the People’s Liberation Army during President Xi Jinping’s first five-year term.

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Speculation has been rife that Fan has been under a cloud since his retirement from the Politburo in late October.

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