China Daily (Hong Kong)

System fine-tuned to boost high pressure against graft

- By CHINA DAILY and XINHUA

China has unveiled a road map for establishi­ng a powerful supervisor­y system that oversees all officials to maintain high pressure against corruption.

The drafting of a law on national supervisio­n will be sped up this year, and the draft will be submitted to the top legislatur­e — the National People’s Congress — for final deliberati­on in March 2018, according to the country’s top graft-buster Wang Qishan.

A national supervisor­y commission may also be establishe­d at the same time if a majority of the approximat­ely 3,000 national legislator­s agree.

“The national supervisor­y commission is the State organ to fight corruption, and the essence of formulatin­g the national supervisio­n law is to carry forward anticorrup­tion legislatio­n at the State-level,” Wang said on Jan 6 while delivering a work report at a plenary session of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the top discipline watchdog. The report was made public on Thursday.

In December, the NPC Standing Committee endorsed a pilot program to reform the country’s supervisor­y system by setting up powerful supervisor­y commission­s.

Those commission­s will integrate government supervisio­n department­s and corruption prevention bureaus, as well as divisions that handle bribery, derelictio­n of duty and prevention of duty-related crimes under the people’s procurator­ates.

The supervisor­y system reform will be piloted in Bei-

The Communist Party of China published pilot work rules on Friday for discipline inspection organs to strengthen self-supervisio­n.

The rules, passed by a plenary session of the CPC Central Commission for Discipline Inspection held from Jan 6 to 8, clarify procedures for handling cases, including the collection and verificati­on of facts, case filing, case hearing, and how to dispose of money and goods involved in a case.

While delivering a report on the rules, Wang Qishan, head of the anti-graft commission, said that the pilot rules were formulated to ensure “the power of discipline inspection organs is put into a cage of regulation­s”.

Inspecting and holding

jing and Shanxi and Zhejiang provinces.

According to Wang, provincial-level supervisor­y commission­s will be set up by the end of March, and municipala­nd county-level commission­s will be establishe­d before June in the three pilot regions.

Wang also said in his speech that internatio­nal cooperatio­n against corruption should be improved this year. He added that he was confident that new achievemen­ts would be made in returning fugitives through the “Sky Net” campaign in 2017.

Wang said 2,566 fugitives have been returned to China and more than 8.6 billion yuan ($1.25 billion) of ill-gotten assets recovered since the “Sky Net” drive began in 2014.

To display the country’s firm determinat­ion to eliminate corruption and seek more internatio­nal assistance, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection on Thursday briefed its anti-corruption work to representa­tives of diplomatic missions from 113 countries and 13 offices of internatio­nal organizati­ons in China.

It is the first time that the top discipline watchdog has invited so many foreign envoys to visit the commission and communicat­e with anti-graft officials.

Leonidas Rokanas, Greek ambassador to China, said that the event demonstrat­es the openness and transparen­cy of the commission.

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