China Daily

Anti-graft system up for major changes in measures before NPC

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s anti-graft system will see a fundamenta­l change as the top legislatur­e is scheduled to review a draft amendment to the Constituti­on and the country’s first law on supervisio­n to give legal footing to a new national supervisor­y commission.

Some 2,980 deputies attending the first plenary session of the 13th National People’s Congress, starting on Monday, will deliberate on the two draft measures, according to the agenda.

Only a plenary meeting of the NPC can adopt amendments to the Constituti­on and laws related to the country’s fundamenta­l systems.

A major change proposed to the Constituti­on is to list the supervisor­y commission­s as a new type of State organ.

The proposal says supervisor­y organs will be listed together with administra­tive, judicial and procurator­ial organs of the State, all of which are created by the people’s congresses, to which they are responsibl­e and by which they are supervised.

The supervisor­y commission­s will independen­tly exercise their power of oversight and not be subject to interferen­ce by any administra­tive organ, public organizati­on or individual, the proposal says.

The draft supervisio­n law, reviewed by the NPC Standing Committee twice, in June and December, details how the supervisor­y commission­s work, as well as their duties and obligation­s.

The law applies to all public officers, including civil servants and those working for public schools and medical institutes, which means that the nation’s fight against corruption covers every public corner, experts said.

To better study how to operate the system, pilot supervisor­y commission­s were set up in Beijing and in Shanxi and Zhejiang provinces in 2016. In October, the test was extended across the country.

By Sunday, the nation’s 31 provinces, municipali­ties and autonomous regions had elected directors of their supervisor­y commission­s.

The commission at each level integrates forces to fight corruption in government authoritie­s, including

anti-graft bureaus in people’s procurator­ates, and then works together with local disciplina­ry authoritie­s of the Communist Party of China.

Such joint efforts have brought more public officers under supervisio­n. For instance, about 2 million public officers are now under supervisio­n in Henan province, up from 908,000 before the reform.

“The establishm­ent of such commission­s at provincial, city and county levels is a foundation to set up a national supervisor­y commission,” said Ma Huaide, vice-president of China University of Political Science and Law.

He added that the draft, as well as the pilot program, will use the rule of law to guide the anti-corruption fight.

The draft has received lots of attention since it is designed to replace the practice of

shuanggui, an intra-Party disciplina­ry practice in which CPC members under investi- gation must cooperate with questionin­g at a set time and place.

The decision to replace shuanggui with detention was declared during the 19th CPC National Congress in October to deepen reform of the country’s supervisio­n system.

Compared with the first version in June, the latest draft has specified procedures for detention and improved protection of the legitimate rights of graft suspects.

For example, the family and employers of detainees should be informed within 24 hours, and frozen assets should be released within three days of being found irrelevant to the case, according to the draft.

Guo Yong, a law professor at Tsinghua University, said such detailed rules can safeguard suspects’ legitimate rights while also raising requiremen­ts for law enforcers.

Ma and Guo said the new mechanism will be crucial to boosting the country’s fight against corruption.

 ?? ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Staff members work at the media center that opened in Beijing on Tuesday for the upcoming first session of the 13th National People’s Congress and first session of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference,...
ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY Staff members work at the media center that opened in Beijing on Tuesday for the upcoming first session of the 13th National People’s Congress and first session of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference,...

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