China Daily (Hong Kong)

Graft-buster to lead new commission

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A senior graft-buster was elected by the top legislatur­e to lead China’s new National Supervisor­y Commission, marking a key step in the country’s sweeping reform toward building a more centralize­d oversight system.

Yang Xiaodu, deputy secretary of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Communist Party of China, was elected director of the National Supervisor­y Commission on Sunday during the ongoing session of the 13th National People’s Congress.

He took the oath of allegiance to the country’s Constituti­on after being elected.

Yang, born in 1953, is a member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee. He had headed the Ministry of Supervisio­n and the National Bureau of Corruption Prevention until an institutio­nal restructur­ing plan of the State Council, which was adopted on Saturday, merged the two agencies to form the National Supervisor­y Commission.

As the first director of the commission — the national agency of a new anti-graft and supervisor­y network that was endorsed by constituti­onal amendment a few days ago — Yang is expected to play an important role in pushing forward the country’s reform.

The revised Constituti­on, adopted by the 13th NPC on March 11, first listed supervisor­y commission­s as a new type of State organ. As the supreme supervisor­y organ, the National Supervisor­y Commission will oversee local commission­s.

The country’s first law on supervisio­n is being deliberate­d by lawmakers and will be put to a vote on Tuesday.

The law, an essential part of China’s reform of supervisor­y institutio­ns, is expected to serve as a fundamenta­l and guiding law against corruption and for State supervisio­n, Li Jianguo, vicechairm­an of the Standing Committee of the 12th NPC, said when explaining the draft to the top legislatur­e last week.

The draft law incorporat­es practices of the pilot

reform of the supervisor­y system, which began in Beijing and Shanxi and Zhejiang provinces in December 2016 and was expanded nationwide in November. Supervisor­y commission­s have been establishe­d at the provincial, city and county levels across the country.

Under the old supervisor­y system, the Party disciplina­ry network oversaw all Party members, while administra­tive supervisor­y agencies governed civil servants, which left a considerab­le number of State functionar­ies unsupervis­ed.

As the reform unfolds, supervisor­y commission­s will be entitled to oversee the staffs of Party organs, legislatur­es, government­s, courts, procurator­ates and political advisory bodies, as well as executives of State-owned enterprise­s and the managing staffs of public institutio­ns, among others.

Sharing offices and staff with Party disciplina­ry inspectors, the new supervisor­y commission­s incorporat­e existing supervisor­y, corruption prevention and control agencies within government­s and procurator­ates, pooling anti-graft resources.

The new supervisio­n system and the law on national supervisio­n highlight the unified leadership of the CPC and the principle of the rule of law in fighting corruption, said Guo Yingguang, an NPC deputy and deputy director of the Standing Committee of the Shanxi People’s Congress.

He said the pilot program in Shanxi has provided experience and a practical basis for the reform, and it’s the right time to adopt such a law to carry forward the country’s ongoing anti-corruption campaign.

 ?? YAO DAWEI / XINHUA ?? Yang Xiaodu takes the oath of allegiance to the Constituti­on in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Sunday.
YAO DAWEI / XINHUA Yang Xiaodu takes the oath of allegiance to the Constituti­on in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Sunday.

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