China Daily (Hong Kong)

3rd high-level official probed

Government shows determinat­ion to root out corruption, experts say

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

A senior Sichuan political adviser is being investigat­ed for “suspected serious law and discipline violations”, the country’s top anti-graft watchdog announced on Sunday.

The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Communist Party of China announced its investigat­ion of Li Chongxi, chairman of the Sichuan Provincial Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, on Sunday morning.

No details of the suspected corruption were given.

Li, 62, is the third ministeria­llevel official to be investigat­ed for corruption since the CPC elected its new leadership in November 2012, following Jiang Jiemin, former head of the Stateowned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission, and Li Dongsheng, former viceminist­er of the Ministry of Public Security.

At least another 13 senior officials at the vice-ministeria­l level have been investigat­ed for corruption since the new leadership came into power.

The announceme­nt on Li came only four days after the Party mapped out a five-year guideline to help check the spread of corruption, vowing to fight graft firmly and to maintain its “high-handed posture” over the next five years.

“The investigat­ion of Li shows once again that the central government fights not only flies (low-level officials) but also tigers (senior officials),” said Yang Weidong, professor of the Chinese Academy of Governance, adding that this shows the central government’s determinat­ion to combat corruption.

The crackdown on senior officials, who can cause more harm if corrupt than lower officials, strengthen­s public confidence in the anti-corruption fight. More importance should be given to preventing corruption, Yang said.

Fewer corrupt officials means more good officials who perform real deeds for the public, which is good.” LI GANG MIGRANT WORKER FROM HEBEI

Without such a mechanism, the crackdown can only prevent corruption for a short period, he said.

A system to prevent officials from personally benefiting from “official appointmen­ts” and “power abuse” should be created to root out corruption opportunit­ies, Yang added.

Li Gang, 36, a migrant worker from Hebei province, said he has been paying constant attention to the anti-corruption news and is thrilled to see the attention the central government has attached to such work.

“Fewer corrupt officials means more good officials who perform real deeds for the public, which is good,” Li said.

Li said, however, he hopes the government will also pay more attention to anti- corruption at the grassroots level, where officials have more contact with the general public.

According to a report released by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences on Thursday, 75.3 percent of those polled think China faces serious corruption, up 1.1 percent from 2011.

The report also showed a rise in people’s confidence in anti-corruption measures after the new leadership came into power.

In a poll conducted in 2011, 57.6 percent of respondent­s were confident about anti-corruption measures. That ratio rose to 73.7 in the latest survey.

About 50 percent of those polled think the work style of officials has improved since the introducti­on of “eight-point” rules in early December, which asked CPC officials to reduce pomp, ceremony, bureaucrat­ic visits and meetings.

The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said on Thursday that a total of 25,855 people have been punished for breaches of the “eight-point” rules, according to Xinhua News Agency.

The report said 54.7 percent of those polled believe “banquets at public expense” have reduced, 50.8 percent think there is less “extravagan­ce and waste”, and 50.5 percent see a decline in “above- standard receptions”.

Also on Sunday, the Organizati­on Department of the CPC Central Committee issued a notificati­on asking leading cadres to report their personal informatio­n faithfully.

The notificati­on vowed spotchecks of leading cadres’ reports made since this year. The checks will be made at random every year.

The notificati­on also said more importance would be attached to those cadres who are to be promoted and those who are listed as reserve cadres.

A stipulatio­n on leading cadres’ reports of personal informatio­n was published in 2010 by the CPC central committee and the State Council. The stipulatio­n required leading officials to declare their assets and marital status. Any immigratio­n by their spouses and children should also be declared.

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