Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

China targets rumours, religion in new party rules

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

BEIJING: China’s ruling Communist Party has issued a revised set of regulation­s governing members’ behaviour, threatenin­g punishment for spreading political rumours and recommendi­ng those who cling to religious beliefs be asked to leave the party.

President Xi Jinping’s on-going crackdown against deeprooted corruption, begun six years ago when he took office, has shaken up the party, with Xi warning, like other leaders before him, that the party’s very survival is at stake.

Xi has accrued more power than any of his immediate predecesso­rs and has intensifie­d efforts to ensure cadres are loyal, discipline­d, upright and honest.

The updated discipline rules, released late on Sunday by the graft watchdog the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection but in effect from August 18, put into written form many orders that are in practice already in effect.

In the most serious cases where a law has been broken, party members can be prosecuted, but in many cases the most severe punishment that can be meted out is expulsion from the party.

Xi’s name has also been written into the revised rules, as it is already in the party and country’s constituti­on, putting him at the very centre of party life.

Party members are not allowed to speak out against central party policies or decisions, and nor can they spread “political rumours or damage the party’s unity”, the new rules say.

Another new clause takes aim at party members who are also religious. While the country’s constituti­on guarantees freedom of religion the party is officially atheist and party members are supposed to be too.

 ??  ?? ■ Chinese President Xi Jinping has accrued more power than any of his immediate predecesso­rs. BLOOMBERG FILE
■ Chinese President Xi Jinping has accrued more power than any of his immediate predecesso­rs. BLOOMBERG FILE

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