 China’s Communist Party Chief Xi Jinping reads as attendants serve tea 
at the Great Hall of the People during the third plenary session of the 
National People’s Congress in Beijing, yesterday.  
VIDEO: LC: TIAN WEI ON NPC CPPCC CCTV News - CNTV English
China’s Communist Party Chief Xi Jinping reads as attendants serve tea 
at the Great Hall of the People during the third plenary session of the 
National People’s Congress in Beijing, yesterday.  
VIDEO: LC: TIAN WEI ON NPC CPPCC CCTV News - CNTV English
(Reuters) - 
China
 unveiled a government restructuring plan on Sunday, cutting 
cabinet-level entities by two and dissolving its powerful Railways 
Ministry, as the country's new leaders look to boost efficiency and 
combat corruption.
The reforms mark the biggest 
reduction in ministries since 1998 when then-premier Zhu Rongji oversaw 
the overhaul of the State Council, and coincides with growing public 
concern over transparency and overlapping bureaucracies.
The
 government will join the Family Planning Commission -- the agency that 
controls the controversial one-child policy -- with the Health Ministry,
 and strengthen the powers of the food and drug regulators, it said in a
 report released during the on-going annual meeting of parliament.
"Currently,
 numerous operational, organizational and division of labor problems 
exist in State Council ministries," State Council Secretary-General Ma 
Kai said in a speech on the plan to the National People's Congress.
Ma
 added that "breach of duty, using positions for personal gain and 
corruption" under the structure had not been effectively constrained.
China's
 president-in-waiting Xi Jinping and premier-designate Li Keqiang assume
 their new roles after the annual congress concludes next week.
The
 Railways Ministry and Family Planning Commission have been particularly
 unpopular, and their restructuring was widely expected.
The
 Railways Ministry has faced numerous problems over the past few years, 
including heavy debts from funding new high-speed lines, waste and 
fraud.
Railways planning will be 
coordinated under the broader transport ministry. The government has 
pledged to open the rail industry to private investment on an 
unprecedented scale.
Family 
planning officials, meanwhile, have been known to compel women to have 
abortions to meet birth-rate targets. High profile cases have sparked 
national fury, such as when a woman in inland Shaanxi province was 
forced to abort her 7-month pregnancy last year.
Some
 analysts have said the merger of the health and family planning 
agencies would be a blow to the political base needed to maintain the 
one-child policy, which many demographers say should be relaxed.
The
 report said family planning must continue "on the basis of stable and 
low birth rates", but added that policies would be "improved". China's 
one-child policy is still generally enforced, although there are a 
number of family situations exempt from the rule.
A
 recently retired official from the Family Planning Commission who 
maintains close ties with the agency, said the merger does not mean the 
commission's power will be reduced.
"For
 such a long time, hundreds of millions of people had to have 
contraception and birth control, this kind of work is necessary. But 
it's possible that there will be fewer things done by force," the 
retired official said.
SUPER MINISTRIES
The
 restructuring plan, which will cut cabinet-level agencies to 25, will 
also boost the role of the food and drug regulators, placing it within 
the cabinet in response to an almost never-ending series of scandals 
over product safety.
Prosecutions 
for producing or selling fake drugs or toxic food jumped to more than 
8,000 in 2012, more than five times the number in 2011, according to a 
report by the office of China's top prosecutor also issued on Sunday.
China's
 maritime enforcement agencies will be consolidated, as well, giving the
 National Oceanic Administration control over coast guard forces, 
customs police and fisheries enforcement as China faces growing tensions
 with 
Japan and South East Asian neighbors over disputed seas.
The move will bring China's maritime law enforcement forces, currently 
scattered among different ministries, under the unified management of a 
single administration, according to a report delivered by State 
Councilor Ma Kai at the annual parliamentary session on Sunday.
The
 new agency will still be named the National Oceanic Administration 
(NOA). It will have under its control the coast guard forces of the 
Public Security Ministry, the fisheries law enforcement command of the 
Agriculture Ministry and the maritime anti-smuggling police of the 
General Administration of Customs, Ma said in his report about the plan 
on the institutional restructuring and functional transformation of the 
State Council, China's cabinet.
The NOA currently has only one maritime law enforcement department, China Marine Surveillance.
The proposed administration, administered by the Ministry of Land and 
Resources, will carry out law enforcement activities in the name of 
China's maritime police bureau and under the operational direction of 
the Ministry of Public Security, said Ma, who is also the 
secretary-general of the State Council.
In addition to law 
enforcement, other functions of the new administration include outlining
 the oceanic development plan, supervising and managing the use of sea 
waters, and protecting ocean ecology, Ma said.
A high-level 
consultative and coordinating body, the National Oceanic Commission, 
will also be set up to formulate oceanic development strategies and 
coordinate important oceanic affairs, Ma said.
One parliament delegate said on the sidelines of the congress session that the move was not linked to the military.
"Our
 coastline is very long and our oceans cover a vast area. There is no 
military thinking behind it," said Zhang Guibai.
China will also merge its 
two media watchdogs -- the General Administration of Press and 
Publication and the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television 
-- and restructure the National Energy Administration, Ma said.
The move is meant to coordinate the resources of each
 sector and promote the reform of cultural institutions, Ma said in his 
report on the plan for the institutional reform and functional 
transformation of the State Council, China's cabinet.
The new administration will be responsible for promoting the 
development of these sectors and supervising related agencies and their 
businesses, said Ma, who is also secretary-general of the State Council. 
The merger will be conducive to establishing a modern 
communication system, which is rapidly shaped by digital information 
technology, and boosting the country's cultural influence, said a 
statement from the State Commission Office for Public Sector Reform, 
which explains the reason of the institutional reform
Sources: Reuters - 
Reporting by Michael Martina, Shen Yan, Sui-Lee Wee and Ben Blanchard; Editing by Jonathan Standing and Michael Perry; CCTV, Xinhua
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