China Daily Global Edition (USA)

The corrupt must not go scot-free

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No matter how crafty corrupt officials are, they cannot escape the long hand of the law. But even then judicial authoritie­s should strengthen supervisio­n and inspection to root out corruption, says an article in the Beijing News. Excerpts:

A court has found Li Xuezhi, an official with the Department of Environmen­tal Protection inNorth China Center for Environmen­tal Inspectors, guilty of taking bribes. The court order says Li took every precaution before taking bribes from enterprise­s to ensure that his crime was not detected by supervisio­n and inspection officials. For instance, he once checked the telephone log of the company manager to ensure that his name didn’t figure on it. He even forced some officials to take a bath before taking a bribe to prevent them from planting some evidence on him to prove his crime.

But despite making his best efforts to cover his tracks, he was caught and convicted for his crime. Li’s actions show that corrupt officials like him are aware of the “potential risk” of taking bribes. But their inherent greed still forces them to take the risk.

Multiparty testimonie­s, summaries of meetings and accounts of the companies that gave bribes to Li have already formed a complete chain of evidence to prove his crime. But the incident shows that there are loopholes in the supervisio­n and inspection system which need to be plugged immediatel­y.

Since corrupt officials like Li are not rare today and take every precaution not to leave any evidence of their crime, the authoritie­s have to take foolproof measures to ensure that irrespecti­ve of their shrewdness, no corrupt official escapes punishment.

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