China Daily (Hong Kong)

Inspection­s in provinces foster plans for correction­s

- By CHINA DAILY

All 32 ministries and institutes inspected by the top disciplina­ry watchdog of the Communist Party of China have released plans to improve the problems exposed in the inspection.

In addition, four provinces — Liaoning, Anhui, Shan-dong and Hunan — have released the results of the “looking back campaign” on the watchdog’s website.

The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the nation’s top anti-graft body, conducted the ninth round of inspection­s from February to April, exposing problems such as loose Party leadership, illegal trading of power and money, illegal promotion of unqualifie­d officials and falsifying economic growth data.

For example, inspectors pointed out that Liaoning province falsified economic data over a certain period, a malpractic­e found throughout the whole province.

In response, the province will conduct stricter reviews and assessment of economic data to guarantee that the informatio­n is objective and accurate, and any official responsibl­e for false numbers will be severely punished, according to a statement released on Thursday.

All officials found responsibl­e for severe violations so far have been punished.

The National Developmen­t and Reform Commission has conducted preliminar­y investigat­ions in 115 cases transferre­d from the central-level inspectors, and 15 officials were punished based on the regulation­s of the Party and government­s, among them 13 at the ministeria­l level.

By the end of July, the State Tobacco Administra­tion and affiliated branches had dealt with 348 cases based on feedback from inspectors, in which 168 officials were punished.

Some high-profile events uncovered in the media also became inspection targets.

For example, in April, some media reported that trademark agencies couldn’t get registrati­on certificat­es for more than half a year due to a lack of the proper paper.

A complicate­d purchasing process and faulty communicat­ion between department­s were responsibl­e, the State Administra­tion of Industry and Commerce said.

The administra­tion punished nine officials.

“Inspection­s are an important tool for conducting supervisio­n inside the Party,” Wang Qishan, head of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, said last week as the 10th round of inspection started.

The new round of inspection will cover another 32 centrallev­el department­s and institutes and another four provinces will start the lookingbac­k or re-inspection. has

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