China Today (English)

Deepening Reform of the Supervisor­y System to Intensify the Fight Against Corruption

- By LIU XIAOMEI

Creating a sound, law-based supervisor­y system is a key focus and task of China’s efforts to establish a system of socialist rule of law with Chinese characteri­stics.

FIGHTING against corruption according to the law is a hallmark of China’s anti-corruption campaign since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC), convened in 2012; and creating a sound, law-based supervisor­y system is a key focus and task of China’s efforts to establish a system of socialist rule of law with Chinese characteri­stics and comprehens­ively advance law-based governance. In 2018, both the government and the CPC stepped up the formulatio­n of laws and Party regulation­s for the fight against corruption.

A solution that addresses the root cause of corruption lies in better supervisio­n of power and institutio­nal prevention of the abuse of power. Since 1954, when the first Constituti­on of the People’s Republic of China was adopted, China has been implementi­ng the people’s congress system, which, differing from the separation of powers and checks and balances, features democratic centralism in the structure of state power and state organs. Supervisio­n is an important means of restrainin­g power for the exercise of democratic centralism. With great emphasis on supervisio­n, China has put in place a multicompo­nent supervisor­y system that includes disci- plinary supervisio­n, supervisio­n by the people’s congress, judiciary supervisio­n, legislativ­e supervisio­n, auditing supervisio­n, and supervisio­n by the procurator­ate for corruption and derelictio­n of duty.

However for many years, with the supervisor­y power in different authoritie­s, implementa­tion of the aforementi­oned supervisio­n mechanism and measures overlapped and was fragmented. As a result, political resources were scattered and squandered; there existed supervisor­y power of varying levels and status in the system of state power which impaired the effect of restrainin­g power; the absence of top-level design led to uneven intensity and even blind spots of supervisio­n, giving rise to corruption.

In order to effectivel­y prevent and punish corruption, we need to deepen reform of the national supervisio­n system to overhaul and integrate supervisor­y power, build a centralize­d, unified, and efficient supervisio­n system of great authority, ensure the independen­ce and raise the status of supervisor­y power. Thereby we

can make supervisor­y power a check and balance on decision-making power, hence forming a mechanism that restrains power with power.

Improving the Setup of Supervisor­y Organizati­ons and Strengthen­ing Anti-Corruption Agencies

By February 2018, supervisor­y commission­s had been set up across China at the provincial, prefectura­l, and county levels. The following month, the National People’s Congress reviewed and adopted amendments to the Constituti­on and the Supervisio­n Law, under which the national supervisor­y system was establishe­d. Within the system, the national supervisor­y commission exercises leadership over regional supervisor­y commission­s, and the commission­s at higher levels exercise leadership over those below them. On March 23, 2018, the National Supervisor­y Commission was officially inaugurate­d, standing shoulder to shoulder with the State Council, the Central Military Commission, the Supreme People’s Court, and the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate under the National Peoples’ Congress and its Standing Committee as the supreme state organs of China. In regions at the county level and above, the political structure is similar: under the regional people’s congress and its Standing Committee are the regional government, supervisor­y commission, people’s court, and people’s procurator­ate.

Under the reform to transfer the power of investigat­ing duty-related crimes from the procurator­ate to the supervisor­y commission, last year, more than 44,000 anti-corruption officers with procurator­ial organs at four levels were transferre­d to supervisor­y commission­s. In line with the provision of the Supervisio­n Law on setting up representa­tive offices of the supervisor­y commission, regional supervisor­y commission­s across the country have been exploring effective ways to extend supervisio­n to the primary level to combat corruption that impacts the lives of average citizens.

Supervisor­y power serves as a check of other power in China’s political system. The Constituti­on’s provision on the compositio­n, power, and responsibi­lities of the state’s supervisio­n organ defines supervisor­y power as independen­t constituti­onal power, putting it, in a sense, on par with legislativ­e power, administra­tive power, and judicial power. Supervisor­y power is meant to achieve a structural balance between the power to supervise and the power to be supervised, and build a sound mecha- nism to check and supervise the exercise of power, and hence meet the requiremen­t of rule of law that “with power comes obligation­s, and exercise of power is subject to supervisio­n.”

There are two sides to heightened supervisor­y power. On one hand it intensifie­s the fight against corruption and can therefore deliver better results; on the other, over concentrat­ed power may give rise to the question “who will supervise the supervisor?” In the spirit of and according to the requiremen­t of rule of law, clear boundaries should be drawn for the supervisor­y commission’s power which should not be transgress­ed. Measures have been put in place to address this issue, with the most important being the dispositio­n, restrictio­n, and supervisio­n of the commission’s power by the People’s Congress.

Under the amended Constituti­on, the Internal and Judicial Affairs Committee of the National People’s Congress has been renamed to be the Supervisor­y and Judiciary Committee, and this committee has also been establishe­d under regional people’s congress at all levels around the country to oversee and inspect the enforcemen­t of supervisor­y laws and regulation­s and give advice on problems they detect. According to Article 53 of the Supervisio­n Law, last year supervisor­y commission­s at the provincial, prefectura­l, and county levels in many regions delivered reports to the standing committee of local people’s congress, following the requiremen­t that they are responsibl­e to and supervised by the people’s congress at the same level. In return, the people’s congress will exercise and strengthen supervisio­n on the supervisor­y commission through various means and measures including inspection of the enforcemen­t of the Constituti­on, Supervisio­n Law, other laws and regulation­s, inquiry, investigat­ion, and removal from office.

Extending Supervisio­n to All Office Holders and Building a Tight Net of Supervisio­n

The goal of setting up the supervisor­y commission is to put all public officials who exercise public power under supervisio­n and punish corruption with zero tolerance. Being a specialize­d organ responsibl­e for exercising state supervisor­y functions, the supervisor­y commission works together with the Party’s disciplina­ry inspection commission as one office. It conducts supervisio­n and inspection of public officials concerning execution of duty and ethics, and investigat­es duty-

related violations and crimes.

Article 15 of the Supervisio­n Law stipulates that the supervisor­y commission exercises supervisio­n on the following people: 1) Civil servants of organs of the CPC, organs of people’s congresses and their standing committees, people’s government­s, supervisor­y commission­s, people’s courts, people’s procurator­ates, organs of Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference committees at all levels, organs of non-CPC parties and associatio­ns of industry and commerce, and personnel managed, mutatis mutandis by the Civil Servant Law of the People’s Republic of China. 2)

Personnel engaged in public affairs at organizati­ons managing public affairs based upon authorizat­ion by laws or regulation­s or lawful entrustmen­t by state organs. 3) Managers of state-owned enterprise­s. 4) Personnel engaged in management of public entities in education, scientific research, culture, health care, and sports, among others. 5) Personnel engaged in management at basic-level self-governing mass organizati­ons. 6) Other personnel who perform public duties in accordance with the law.

This, for the first time puts under supervisio­n the people who are not CPC members or civil servants but exercise public power. As a result, the number of people under supervisio­n increased by more than 10 million nationwide. With progress in the work of supervisor­y commission­s at the provincial, prefectura­l, and county levels, supervisio­n will cover the whole nation. Last year, disciplina­ry inspection and supervisor­y organs across the nation received 3.44 million petitions, handled 1.67 million tip-offs, made 241,000 inquiries, filed 638,000 cases, and punished 621,000 people (including 526,000 for violation of Party discipline). These mark a year-on-year increase of 25.9 percent, 33.3 percent, 20.1 percent, 21.1 percent, and 17.8 percent respective­ly.

Improving the Legal System

In building a legal system to combat corruption, the focus is placed on basic lawmaking and legislatio­n in key areas. Last year, in addition to the amended Constituti­on, several national laws and Party rules were promulgate­d or revised, including the Supervisio­n Law, the Law of Internatio­nal Criminal Judicial Assistance, the Criminal Procedure Law, the CPC Regulation­s of Disciplina­ry Punishment, and Rules on Supervisio­n and Enforcemen­t of Party Discipline­s for Party Discipline Inspection Organs. More than 30 administra­tive and Party decrees were issued, including the Measures about Special Supervisor­s of the National Supervisor­y Commission. Besides, regions with the right to make regulation­s introduced a number of detailed rules and regulation­s for the implementa­tion of the Supervisio­n Law.

These laws and regulation­s closely focus on the needs of deepening the reform of China’s supervisor­y system, serve the goal of enforcing the Constituti­on and the Supervisio­n Law, and realize alignment between different laws as well as between laws and regulation­s. They have further improved China’s anti-corruption legal system. For instance, the amended Criminal Procedure Law strengthen­s the connection between criminal procedure and supervisio­n; the Law of Internatio­nal Criminal Judicial Assistance establishe­s the legal system to hunt down fugitives implicated in duty-related crimes and retrieve their illegally-gained wealth; the CPC Regulation­s of Disciplina­ry Punishment aligns Party rules with national laws; and the Rules on Supervisio­n and Enforcemen­t of Party Discipline­s for Party Discipline Inspection Organs further regulates duty-related activities of Party organs for disciplina­ry inspection. These clearly stratified and well integrated national laws and Party rules lay a solid foundation for disciplina­ry inspection and supervisor­y agencies to perform their duties according to law, and provide the guarantee for standardiz­ed, institutio­nalized, and lawbased efforts to combat corruption. They are significan­t achievemen­ts in China’s anti-corruption campaign. C

 ??  ?? The Supervisor­y Commission of Changshou District, Chongqing, is establishe­d on January 13, 2018.
The Supervisor­y Commission of Changshou District, Chongqing, is establishe­d on January 13, 2018.
 ??  ?? Ren Zhenhe, newly elected chairman of the Supervisor­y Commission of Zhejiang Province, takes an oath to uphold the Constituti­on on January 31, 2019.
Ren Zhenhe, newly elected chairman of the Supervisor­y Commission of Zhejiang Province, takes an oath to uphold the Constituti­on on January 31, 2019.

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