China Daily (Hong Kong)

Anti-corruption drive gathers more steam

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Anumber of corrupt officials have been punished in recent times either according to the law or the Party’s discipline or both, which shows the Party’s anti-corruption campaign since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China has gained in strength.

The separation of the Party’s discipline and the country’s laws is a new characteri­stic of governance and reflects the Party’s determinat­ion to root out corruption from society, with the recent punishment­s given to corrupt officials being a strong proof of that.

The court cases of corrupt officials involve only their ille- gal activities, not violation of Party discipline. The trials are held strictly according to the law following the principle that everybody is equal before the law. And court judgments in corruption cases are based totally on the country’s laws, indicating the authoritie­s’ respect for the rule of law.

Since the 18th CPC National Congress in November 2012, the Party’s discipline inspection department has focused on investigat­ing cases of Party discipline violations and passed on the clues of the suspects’ illegal activities to the judiciary. The Party’s 18th Central Commission for Discipline Inspection has clearly said that discipline inspection authoritie­s should not act like public security or procurator­ial organs, or courts within the Party. Instead, they should focus on disciplina­ry inspection.

The separation of Party discipline and the country’s laws is conducive to effectivel­y supervisin­g not only government officials but also Party members while passing judgments in corruption cases strictly according to the law can prevent outside interferen­ce in court matters and manifest the dignity and fairness of the law.

Besides, the rule of law should be first establishe­d in an all-round way within the Party and government. And since many corruption cases have revealed that officials’ first step toward corruption was violation of Party discipline, leading Party officials can be prevented from becoming corrupt and the overall risk of duty-related corruption remarkably reduced if the higher authoritie­s tightened disciplina­ry restrictio­ns on officials.

The new relationsh­ip between the Party’s discipline and the country’s law is another characteri­stic of the anti-corruption campaign. Many corrupt officials have actively turned themselves in and surrendere­d their ill-gotten gains in exchange for lenient punishment­s after their cases were transferre­d to the judiciary, which shows the Party’s discipline inspection work has made judicial practice more efficient.

The Party’s anti-corruption watchdog has become more profession­al by standardiz­ing the procedure of discipline inspection. The working rules for discipline inspection organs, issued in January 2017, clearly stipulate the purposes and procedure of their pursuit.

The goal of discipline inspection is to make Party officials and members aware of their faults and liabilitie­s, which will largely reduce the obstacles of judicial authoritie­s in the investigat­ion and evidence gathering process. And regulating, ruling and building the Party according to the law are a preconditi­on and political guarantee for the rule of law, while their goal is to help officials and members to improve the Party’s performanc­e.

Late leader Deng Xiaoping once said the country’s laws cannot be fully implemente­d without the implementa­tion of the Party’s laws and regulation­s. We have reached a stage where the focus should be on enhancing and expanding the achievemen­ts of the Party’s anti-corruption campaign. Moreover, it is very important to deepen judicial reform and strengthen the profession­alism of the Party’s anti-graft watchdog, in order to consolidat­e the rule of law and Party governance, and tighten supervisio­n of power according to the law.

... the Party’s discipline inspection work has made judicial practice more efficient.

The author is director of the Center for Anti-corruption Studies, China University of Mining and Technology, Beijing.

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