
Vu Tien Loc
Chairman, Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry
In August 2008, the sun shone brightly on the Beijing Olympics. With Chinese Vice-President Xi Jinping
providing behind-the-scenes muscle, the government forced factory
closures and enacted draconian traffic restrictions. The veil of smog
lifted at the last minute and the lion’s share of the credit goes to Liu Qi.
As the head of the Beijing Olympic Organising Committee, Liu presided
over the eight-year effort to revamp the host city. When the Games
began, the world was suitably awed by the opening ceremony, events ran
smoothly and the home team hauled in the medals. Minor kerfuffles – a
possibly under-age gymnast and a lip-synched national anthem – were
quickly forgotten: US$40 billion well spent.
A victory lap for the maestro, then. On a 20-27 November tour, Liu
stopped in Livingstone, Zambia, to view Victoria Falls – and to discuss
tourism and trade with Southern Province Minister Daniel Munkombwe. He
held talks with South African President Kgalema Motlanthe and African
National Congress President Jacob Zuma. With Transport Minister Jeff
Radebe and Gauteng Premier Paul Mashatile, Liu negotiated Chinese
participation in infrastructure development for the 2010 Football World
Cup. Before heading home, he stopped in Britain to give London Mayor
Boris Johnson some advice on the city’s hosting of the 2012 Olympic
Games.
A metallurgical engineer by training, Liu joined the Chinese Communist
Party (CCP) ranks while working at the Wuhan Iron and Steel Company. He
rose to become its manager and then was appointed Minister of
Metallurgical Industry.
Liu was Mayor of Beijing from 1999 to 2002, then became the city’s CCP
Secretary. His promotion was timely: the government’s sluggish reaction
to the 2002-2003 Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) outbreak
quickly scuttled the Mayorship of Liu’s successor, Meng Xuenong.

Alternatively,