China Daily (Hong Kong)

Officials punished over shoddy cables

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

The use of substandar­d subway cables in Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi province, has led to the punishment of 122 officials for their responsibi­lity in the case, the central government said on Thursday.

Sixteen of the officials are of the prefecture-city level, which is directly beneath the ministeria­l level.

All of the officials are receiving disciplina­ry or criminal punishment according to laws and regulation­s, according to a statement from the State Council, China’s Cabinet.

In addition, eight people from the cable manufactur­er, Shaanxi Aokai Cable Co, have been arrested, and 19 people — all employees of the Shaanxi branches of related State-owned companies — have been placed under investigat­ion, the statement said.

An online post on March 16 claimed that Subway Line 3 in Xi’an, which opened on Nov 8 and handles on average over 340,000 trips a day, used substandar­d cables that might ignite and release toxic gases.

An investigat­ion by the metro company and local government confirmed that substandar­d cables were used, but they hadn’t affected subway safety or operations, and it was decided to replace all the substandar­d cables.

“A central government investigat­ion group has concluded that it’s a serious case in which enterprise­s illegally produced and sold substandar­d products,” the State Council statement said.

Employees of subway constructi­on agencies colluded with employees of the manufactur­er to use counterfei­t products, while local authoritie­s’ negligence in supervisio­n was also at fault, the statement said.

Shaanxi’s provincial government has been ordered to submit a profound written self-criticism to the central government and to revoke all of Aokai’s authentica­tion certificat­es, trademarks and licenses.

A full check of all related projects has been ordered, as well as replacemen­t of all problemati­c cables as soon as possible. A nationwide inspection of cable production is to be launched. The State Council also asked for a better bidding process in government procuremen­t and an upgraded purchasing system.

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