China Daily (Hong Kong)

Supervisio­n reform statute goes to NPC

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Legislator­s began reviewing a much anticipate­d draft law on national supervisio­n on Tuesday that aims to set up centralize­d, efficient oversight of the country’s anticorrup­tion campaign.

The new measure, an essential part of the reform of supervisor­y institutio­ns, is expected to serve as a fundamenta­l and guiding law against corruption and for State supervisio­n, said Li Jianguo, vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the 12th National People’s Congress, as he introduced the bill to the 13th NPC on Tuesday morning.

It is aimed at enhancing the leadership of the Communist Party of China in anti-corruption campaigns and will bring all public officers under scrutiny, he said.

New supervisor­y commission­s will be establishe­d at the national, provincial, city and county levels. Tasked to handle job-related crimes, they will independen­tly exercise supervisor­y power, and not be subject to interferen­ce from the government, social organizati­ons or individual­s.

The commission­s are to oversee State functionar­ies, investigat­e corruption cases such as bribery, embezzleme­nt and abuse of power, impose administra­tive penalties on corrupt officials, and hand over criminal cases to prosecutor­s, according to the draft law.

“In the face of a tough and complicate­d situation, our existing supervisor­y institutio­ns were clearly unable to meet the demands of the battle against corruption and the campaign to clean up the Party,” Li said.

Under the old system, the Party disciplina­ry network oversaw all Party members and administra­tive agencies governed civil servants, which left a considerab­le number of State functionar­ies unsupervis­ed. That included management at State-owned enterprise­s and workers at public schools and medical institutes.

Supervisor­y powers also were divided among three agencies, with Party agencies regulating Party members according to Party rules, administra­tive agencies watching civil servants according to administra­tive laws, and procurator­ates prosecutin­g State functionar­ies suspected of corruption using criminal law.

“The agencies, with their power divided and overlappin­g, did not function in harmony,” Li said, adding that procurator­ates, which not only investigat­e but also prosecute, were not under effective supervisio­n. With reform, supervisio­n, corruption control and prevention divisions of the government and procurator­ates merged, pooling anti-graft resources.

The draft law incorporat­es practices used in the pilot reform of supervisor­y systems that began in Beijing and Shanxi and Zhejiang provinces in December 2016, Li said. That model was expanded nationwide in November 2017.

Part of the pilot reform was a new detention system tested as a replacemen­t for shuanggui, an intraparty disciplina­ry practice in which a Party member under investigat­ion must cooperate with questionin­g at a set time and place.

“Replacing shuanggui with rigorously regulated detention will help settle a long-lingering legal problem,” Li said. “This shows our resolve and confidence to have fully lawbased governance.”

Zhou Guangquan, an NPC deputy and law professor at Tsinghua University, said the draft highlights protection for graft suspects, which will help exclude any evidence obtained illegally.

 ??  ?? Li Jianguo
Li Jianguo

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