China Daily (Hong Kong)

Watchdogs punish corruption in PLA

- By CHINA DAILY

A total of 4,885 members of the People’s Liberation Army were punished last year for disciplina­ry violations, according to PLA Daily, the military’s flagship newspaper.

Disciplina­ry watchdogs within the PLA investigat­ed 445 cases last year, the newspaper said, adding that the Central Military Commission’s Disciplina­ry Inspection Committee, the PLA’s top anti-corruption body, focused on examining tip-offs about high-ranking officers.

In 2016, the committee also inspected several graft-prone sectors such as infrastruc­ture constructi­on, equipment procuremen­t, research fund management and recruitmen­t. The inspection led to probes into 819 problems in grassroots units, according to the report.

During the Spring Festival holiday in late January, the inspection committee sent inspectors to 452 units at regiment level or above to investigat­e misuse of official cars or public funds.

The report noted that there are still PLA members who continue to break regulation­s despite being clearly aware of the military’s heavy-handed crackdown on disciplina­ry violations.

The PLA will examine derelictio­n of duty in military exercises and training to make sure every unit spares no cases effort in improving combat capability, the report said.

The article also called for stricter scrutiny of personnel work, especially in the promotion and selection of officials, and more rigorous investigat­ion of minor misconduct­s that usually involve a small amount of money.

The military will start to make detailed guidelines for disciplina­ry watchdogs, the report said.

According to available informatio­n, at least seven high-ranking officers, including the former political commissar of the PLA Air Force and the former commander of the People’s Armed Police Force, were placed under internal investigat­ion in 2016 for corruption allegation­s.

So far, more than 50 senior officers with rank of major general or higher have been convicted or put under disciplina­ry probes since the new leadership was elected in November 2012.

They include Xu Caihou and Guo Boxiong, former vice-chairmen of the Central Military Commission.

were investigat­ed by disciplina­ry watchdogs within the PLA last year.

 ?? ZHANG XIUKE / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Uygur passengers get ready to board a train heading to Hotan at Urumqi South Railway Station in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region on Monday. The first express train service that connects Urumqi, the regional capital, with Hotan, was launched on...
ZHANG XIUKE / FOR CHINA DAILY Uygur passengers get ready to board a train heading to Hotan at Urumqi South Railway Station in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region on Monday. The first express train service that connects Urumqi, the regional capital, with Hotan, was launched on...

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