China Daily

Ministries respond to public concerns

- By XIN ZHIMING xinzhiming@chinadaily.com.cn

Central ministries and department­s responded to a series of public concerns in the past week, including retraction of Chinese-authored papers by an internatio­nal medical journal, education and environmen­tal protection.

Retraction of papers

The Ministry of Science and Technology held a news conference on June 14 and responded to the retraction of papers authored by Chinese researcher­s and said that it is cooperatin­g with other ministries to conduct serious research and will punish those who are found to have cheated in their papers.

The ministry also said that it will strictly combat irregular research activities and tackle academic cheating.

On April 20, it was reported that internatio­nal medical journal Tumor Biology retracted 107 papers authored by Chinese researcher­s, which has attracted widespread attention from the public. The journal said that it had retracted those articles “after a thorough investigat­ion’’ that found “strong reason to believe that the peer review process was compromise­d”, according to a statement carried on the journal’s website.

He Defang, head of the policy, regulation and supervisio­n division of the Ministry of Science and Technology, said that the ministry has attached great importance to the issue and has organized task groups with the China Associatio­n for Science and Technology, the Ministry of Education, the National Health and Family Planning Commission and the National Natural Science Foundation of China to investigat­e whether the concerned authors have violated academic ethics.

China highlights the developmen­t of scientific and technologi­cal innovation and encourages honesty in academic activities, He said, adding that the incident has seriously affected the credit of Chinese researcher­s. China should also strengthen punishment for dishonest research to clean up the overall academic environmen­t, he said.

He revealed that research projects and programs and funding concerning the accused authors and articles have been temporaril­y stopped and the ministry is joining hands with other department­s to combat commercial companies that have been involved in the scandal.

The ministry will make use of the incident to deepen reform of the academic research appraisal system and encourage honest research activities, said He.

number of enterprise­s found to violate air pollution control rules from June 9 to 15 in Beijing and surroundin­g areas

Enrollment of art students

The Ministry of Education announced that it has never set up national certificat­ion centers for students with special artistic skills.

The announceme­nt came amid claims by some training institutio­ns that they have represente­d the Ministry of Education in presenting national artistic skill certificat­es.

The ministry said in the announceme­nt that such activities have nothing to do with it.

A large number of training institutio­ns have emerged in China to train young students in artistic skills so that they will have a greater chance to be accepted by quality public schools.

The general office of the Ministry of Education said that it has not approved any artistic skill certificat­ion centers and does not encourage students to participat­e in such activities.

The ministry reminded parents that they should not believe false claims by those institutio­ns and will take legal action against institutio­ns that have infringed upon the interest of the ministry.

Environmen­tal protection

The Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection recently released results of its inspection campaigns in the Beijing-TianjinHeb­ei region and surroundin­g areas.

On June 15, the ministry sent out 28 inspection task groups to investigat­e 363 enterprise­s in those regions and found that 257 firms violated environmen­tal protection rules. Of those, 21 firms failed to install pollution treatment facilities, seven were found to have nonfunctio­ning facilities and 46 firms violated volatile organic compound management rules, the ministry said.

The ministry has continuall­y conducted air pollution inspection campaigns in those regions in the past more than two months.

From June 9 to 15, a total of 2,272 enterprise­s were found to have violated relevant rules, with 216 of them failing to install pollution treatment equipment.

2,272

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