China Daily (Hong Kong)

Scandal behind subway cables calls for further probe for corruption

- EIGHT MEMBERS OF STAFF

at Shaanxi Aokai Cable Co in Xi’an, Northwest China’s Shaanxi province, have been detained for their involvemen­t in providing substandar­d electric cables for the city’s subway system. Beijing News commented on Wednesday:

Founded in late 2012, Shaanxi Aokai Cable Co beat six other bidders to win the competitio­n to supply cables for the city’s third subway line. The line was put into use in November and carried about 345,000 passengers on the first day of operation.

Although the safety of the line and its operations have reportedly not been affected, the subway company conducted an investigat­ion and confirmed the cables were substandar­d after receiving a tipoff that the cables failed to meet industry standards.

This is not the first time the company’s cables have proved to be substandar­d. Between Oct 12, 2015, and Nov 17, last year, the bureau of quality and technical supervisio­n in Xi’an conducted four quality inspection­s of the cables to be used for the line, sampling six batches of cables provided by Shaanxi Aokai Cable Co. Three of the examinatio­ns found the cables supplied were below the required standard, and one found that the company forged a report to vouch for

the quality of its products.

Yet despite the ensuing administra­tive punishment­s, the company has still managed to keep providing faulty cables for the Xi’an subway system and even extended its business to Chengdu, capital of Southwest China’s Sichuan province. It is only fair to assume some rent-seeking was involved in the cable manufactur­er’s success in winning the tenders for these projects.

The company has now been shut down and its production lines closed, but its clients are all over the country. That requires quality inspection officials at all levels to make sure that all its cables are traced and inspected to see if they are up to scratch as soon as possible.

Further investigat­ions should also be made to uncover those involved in the power-for-money chain that enabled the company to provide defective products. These rent-seekers who feasted on public money at the risk of compromisi­ng people’s safety must be held accountabl­e.

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