The Sunday Guardian

China ahead of india in austerity and anti-graft drive

In January 2016, China initiated Operations Skynet and Foxhunt to retrieve stolen funds and help bring fugitives hiding overseas to justice.

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Standing Committee member (PBSC) Wang Qishan, a trusted friend since school and head of the Party’s Central Discipline Inspection Commission (CDIC), to launch a vigorous campaign against corruption throughout the party and government. In October 2013, the powerful People’s Liberation Army (PLA) was brought within its ambit. Wang Qishan despatched teams of CDIC personnel to party units, State-owned Enterprise­s (SoE), government ministries and academic institutes. The PLA was not exempt and CDIC investigat­ive teams visited each service headquarte­rs, military region and other PLA formations.

The campaign yielded immediate results and within two years more than 160,000 “phantom” government employees had been removed and 74,000 party members punished for violating austerity rules. Reports disclosed that more than “100,000 excessive government vehicles” were confiscate­d. Quoting officials of the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China (CAAC), the Canadabase­d Chinese- language website “Boxun” said that over US$4.9 billion were recovered from more than 350 Chinese officials caught at Beijing airport in 2012, while attempting to flee. Separately, the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate reported that 762 officials were captured in flight in 2013, and goods and cash worth over US$1.6 billion recovered. The People’s Bank of China “leaked” a report estimating that 18,000 officials and employees of stateowned enterprise­s had misappropr­iated US$123 billion and fled to the US, Canada, Australia and the Netherland­s.

In January 2016, China initiated Operations Skynet and Foxhunt to retrieve stolen funds and help bring fugitives hiding overseas to justice. By the end of December 2016, the Ministry of Public Security claimed that 857 fugitives were brought back from 66 countries and regions. Two suspects were sent back from the United States and six from Italy, Greece, Bulgaria, Spain and Hungary. Another 283 fugitives were captured in Southeast Asian countries including Thailand, Malaysia and Cambodia. Separately, the CDIC claimed that since 2014, Skynet has brought back 2,442 individual­s, including 397 government workers, and recovered more than RMB 8.5 billion. China estimates that 150 Chinese officials suspected of economic crimes and facing corruption charges are absconding in the US. There has been at least one report of Chinese officials trying to enter the US posing as journalist­s and some Beijing-based British, US, Canadian and Australian diplomats earlier said they were under pressure to assist with Operation Fox Hunt.

In September 2016, the CDIC issued a report stating that 127 civilian “tigers”— defined as officials holding bureaucrat­ic ranks equal to or above that of Vice Minister in the government, party and State-owned Enterprise (SoE) s—and 86 military “tigers” (PLA officers of the rank of major general or above) had been implicated in corruption and been placed under investigat­ion or under arrest. The list includes one former member of the Chinese Communist Party’s highest lead- ership body, namely the Politburo Standing Committee and three former members of the next level, or Politburo. The CDIC regularly posts the names of officials under investigat­ion. China’s official media has reported instances of senior PLA officers committing suicide to avoid conviction, which would mean their family losing all financial and retirement benefits. Xi Jinping and Wang Qishan recently stated that the anticorrup­tion campaign—already the longest and most sustained anti-corruption campaign undertaken by the CCP—would continue. Buttressin­g their statements, the first serving PLA General was arrested on 29 December 2016.

While government and military officials are resentful of the campaign and businessme­n complain that the amount they have to pay in bribes has risen, Xi Jinping’s popularity among the masses is very high.

In India, having taken the first step in tackling an equally difficult task, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, with his reputation for decisivene­ss and a strong popular mandate, could now well lift a leaf out of the Chinese book. Jayadeva Ranade is a former Additional Secretary in the Cabinet Secretaria­t, Government of India. He is President of the Centre for China Analysis and Strategy. The views expressed are personal.

 ??  ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Chinese President Xi Jinping.

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