BEIJING (AP) â" Chinas government vowed  to address long-festering complaints about choking  smog while promising to crack down harder on the  new threat of terrorism and promote unity among  the countrys sometimes restive ethnic  minorities.
  
  In his first annual  policy speech, Premier Li Keqiang also pledged to  move more people into the middle class, cut  government waste and push further with President  Xi Jinpings signature campaign to fight the  rampant official corruption that has undermined  public faith in the Communist Party.
  
   Lis speech at Wednesdays opening of Chinas annual  ceremonial legislature comes as the government  confronts ethnic unrest in the far western region  of Xinjiang that has intensified over the past  year. On Saturday, China saw the first big terror  attack outside Xinjiang blamed on militants from  that region â" a slashing attack at a train  station in Kunming that killed 29 people and  wounded 143.
  
  The meetings nearly  3,000 delegates from across the country observed a  moment of silence for the victims of the attack as  the session opened.
  
  Li did not  specifically mention Saturdays attack in his  policy report, but said China would toughen its  controls on public order, "crack down hard on  violent crimes of terrorism, safeguard Chinas  national security, create good public order and  work together to ensure public security in  China."
  
  Chen Fengxiang, an NPC  delegate from Hubei, said during the session that  the government would take stronger preventative  measures following the attack by black-clad  assailants wielding large knives.
  
   "They lost their senses, and we must crack down  harshly and take strict measures in preventing the  violence," Chen said.
  
  The  government will work harder to reduce pollution by  shutting more coal-fired furnaces and controlling  the tainting of rivers, Li said. He referred to  the stifling smog that creeps over increasing  areas of China and the fouling of the countrys  air, water and soil as "natures red-light warning  against the model of inefficient and blind  development."
  
  Much of Lis report  served to further define priorities that had been  outlined after a party policy meeting in November,  which included plans to make the worlds  second-largest economy more open and  competitive.
  
  The government  released details on its budget for the coming  year, signaling a 12.2 percent increase in  military spending to $132 billion. That followed  last years 10 percent increase to $114 billion,  the highest military budget for any nation other  than the U.S.
  
  There has been a  sharp increase in tensions between China and Japan  in the past 18 months over control of a string of  tiny uninhabited islands in the East China Sea.  While becoming increasingly assertive in its own  territorial claims, Beijing has at the same time  accused Japan of renewed militarism while dwelling  on Tokyos history as an aggressor during World War  II.
  
  "We will safeguard the victory  of World War II and the postwar international  order, and will not allow anyone to reverse the  course of history," Li said.
Saturday, May 16, 2015
China vows to address stifling smog, terror threat
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