China Daily

Audit office can ensure there are no supervisor­y blind spots

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THE AUDITS OF PARTY and government department­s must act as a sharp sword in the battle against corruption, said Hu Zejun, auditor general of the National Audit Office, on Monday. Thepaper.cn comments:

The full coverage audits, which the central authoritie­s initiated in 2015 as a part of regular anti-corruption supervisio­n, are not only audits but a means of sniffing out the clues to uncover corruption. The auditors work with the supervisor­y department­s to bring wrongdoers to justice.

The campaign style “audit storm”, which stressed finding out financial problems not the accountabi­lity for them, will be a thing of the past.

It is necessary to normalize the examinatio­n of the financial records of those holding power, as they often contain clues to abuses of power.

The full coverage audits, which are in line with the aim of ensuring there is no blind spots for supervisio­n, must be strengthen­ed step by step, and finally be transforme­d to an institutio­nal design.

The structural reform plan of the Party and government department­s approved by the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, has paved the way for the materializ­ation of such an institutio­nal design, as the National Audit Office, aside from its previous duties, will also assume supervisor­y power over big government-funded projects, budget execution and State-owned enterprise­s that are now dispersed among three ministry-level department­s.

The judicial, legislatur­e and disciplina­ry department­s must work closely with the National Audit Office to ensure it can effectivel­y fulfill its duties without any interferen­ce.

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