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THE HARDLINER: When Premier Li Peng suddenly canceled a meeting with the Philippine president in 1993, the excuse the government gave was that he had a cold. Over the next four months, Li made only two public appearances. At one of them he confessed to a "minor heart condition." When he resurfaced in August, it was on the front page of newspapers, standing in swim trunks with his hands on his hips. China scholars later wrote that Li had suffered a heart attack. Some accounts say it was preceded by scathing criticism from party elders. Li outlasted his rivals, clinging to power until 2003 after 16 years in the leadership. THE ALLY: Vice Premier Huang Ju lectured Chinese bankers in early 2006 on the importance of government control over state banks. Then he dropped from sight. Nearly two months passed before a Chinese official said vaguely that Huang had been unwell and was convalescing in a hospital. Media were banned from reporting on his condition. Because of his illness, Huang, a key ally of former Chinese President Jiang Zemin, had been expected to retire in the fall of 2007. He died four months earlier. The official announcement of his death gave no cause, though reports say he had pancreatic cancer.
[Associated
Press;
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