China Daily (Hong Kong)

Ex-senior anti-graft inspector under scrutiny for corruption

- By ZHANG YI zhang_yi@chinadaily.com.cn

Zhang Huawei, a former division head for the top anti-corruption watchdog, is himself being investigat­ed for suspected corruption.

The Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection issued a statement on its website on Monday saying that Zhang — who was a senior official at the level of vice-minister — “had seriously violated the Party’s code of conduct”.

According to Capitalnew­s, the WeChat account of Beijing Daily, Zhang is the only head of a national inspection team to be investigat­ed.

Yang Weidong, a law professor at the Chinese Academy of Governance, said the move demonstrat­es the determinat­ion of the top anti-graft body to crack down on corruption, including internally.

“The move is in line with the call from the CCDI that no area is untouchabl­e in graft investigat­ions — the zero-tolerance stance,” Yang said, adding that officials Zhang’s case signals that there are no exceptions in the nationwide anti-graft campaign.

“More significan­tly, the case shows the public that antigraft watchdogs exercise the same iron policy within their own ranks,” Yang said.

Zhang took part in several rounds of inspection­s between 2013 and 2015, either as deputy head or head of a nationalle­vel inspection team, according to informatio­n on the CCDI website. The teams were stationed at major organizati­ons and companies, including Renmin University of China, China Guodian Corp and the General Administra­tion of Sport.

Wang Qishan, head of the CCDI, said in a meeting in December that 38 officials within anti-corruption bodies at the national level and more than 7,200 anti-graft officials at all levels across the country have been discipline­d since late 2012.

Answering public concerns over “who watches the watchers”, the CCDI has passed rules for inspectors, clarifying procedures for handling cases and disposing illegal gains.

within anti-corruption bodies at the national level have been discipline­d since late 2012.

Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

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