China Daily

Cable-maker paid out bribes in Xi’an subway scandal

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

A company that manufactur­ed substandar­d electrical cables used in subways in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, faked test reports for its product and bribed subway contractor­s and supervisor­y officials, according to a statement on Monday by the State Council, China’s Cabinet.

Shaanxi Aokai Cable Co made only the first 15 meters on each end of the cables according to the required standards. It slimmed the long center sections of the cable to increase profit, the statement said.

“Most of the product didn’t go through testing by quality authoritie­s. The company practiced fraud and forged test reports by fabricatin­g official seals,” the statement said.

An online post in March by an unknown whistleblo­wer, said bad cables had been used in Xi’an’s Line 3. The line had been running since Nov 8. An investigat­ion by the operator and city government confirmed that the electrical cables were substandar­d, and all of them were immediatel­y replaced.

The bad cables did not affect subway operations or safety, the investigat­ion found, but no details were given about what subway train systems were involved.

The State Council statement on Monday said the problemati­c cables were used for lighting and air conditione­rs.

Aokai bribed officials and subway contractor­s, and won the bid because price was the sole considerat­ion, it said, adding :“Officials and employees of the contractor­s accepted bribes and colluded with Aokai, allowing the company to collect its own samples, send the samples for testing and receive the test report.”

Malpractic­e by government department­s, including the Shaanxi and Xi’an government­s and quality watchdogs, is also to blame, the State Council said. “Informatio­n was not made public in a timely fashion after problems were found, and different government department­s failed to cooperate well with each other.”

In another statement released this month, the State Council said that a better bidding process for government procuremen­t and an upgraded purchasing system are needed.

The company practiced fraud and forged test reports by fabricatin­g official seals.” State Council

The cable incident has led to the punishment of 122 officials.

Names that have been published include Tang Hongbo, former deputy director of the Xi’an subway constructi­on headquarte­rs. Tang has been removed from that position, and from his position as executive deputy director of the Xi’an associatio­n for science and technology. He was also expelled from the Communist Party of China.

In addition, eight people from Aokai have been arrested, and 19 others — all of whom are employees of the Shaanxi branches of Stateowned companies related to the incident — have been placed under investigat­ion.

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