China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Pilot projects to improve oversight efficiency

- By XINHUA

For Lyu Xiaodong, a grassroots disciplina­ry official in Zhejiang province, recent moves by the Communist Party of China Central Committee will help improve the efficiency of discipline inspection work.

China has launched a pilot program in Beijing, as well as Shanxi and Zhejiang provinces, to make the current supervisio­n system more authoritat­ive and efficient, according to a statement released on Monday by the general office of the CPC Central Committee.

It said supervisio­n committees will be establishe­d as part of the pilots.

Zhuang Deshui, deputy director of the clean government research center at Peking University, said the pilots were chosen as a foundation for anti-corruption.

It is unusual to pilot reforms in Beijing, and this move reflects China’s determinat­ion to press ahead with reform, Zhuang said.

Zhejiang has establishe­d a work group, led by Xia Baolong, the province’s top official, to deepen reform of the province’s supervisio­n system.

Though a concrete plan has yet to be rolled out, Lyu, head of the Party discipline inspection committee in Qingyuan county, Lishui, said the new committee will target more people.

The commission for discipline inspection only inspects CPC members. The new supervisio­n committee will eliminate blind spots, mobilize more anti-corruption resources, integrate procurator­ates, and audit commission­s and corruption prevention bureaus, to reinforce anti-corruption efforts, Lyu said.

Li Yongzhong, former deputy head of the Chinese Discipline Inspection Institute, echoed Lyu’s views. Li highlighte­d the extent of the reform’s coverage.

The current supervisio­n system only covers the country’s administra­tive organs. The people’s congress, the political consultati­ve body, courts and procurator­ates are excluded, Li said.

The new plan will make everyone on the government payroll subjects of the supervisio­n committee, even those in public hospitals and schools, he said.

“According to the current Administra­tive Supervisio­n Law, China’s local supervisio­n authoritie­s are not independen­t,” he explained. “They are under the administra­tion of government­s. Sometimes, the personnel and financial affairs of the supervisio­n department­s were controlled by the local government­s.”

He said the reform of the current supervisio­n system, one of the most important political reforms, indicated China’s determinat­ion to deepen reform and combat corruption.

Li said China’s anti-corruption campaign has been upgraded since the 18th CPC National Congress in late 2012, and it has won applause from home and abroad.

Shanxi has also set up a reform work group, and a plan is being formulated. The province has shocked the country with a spate of corruption cases. In 2014, seven provincial-level officials were placed under investigat­ion, along with 45 city-level and 545 county-level officials.

“Choosing Shanxi for the pilot showed the central government’s recognitio­n of Shanxi’s anti-corruption efforts,” said Li Guoxiang, a research fellow at the Shanxi Provincial Academy of Social Sciences.

“The supervisio­n reform in Shanxi will also provide vital experience,” he said.

Choosing Shanxi for the pilot showed the central government’s recognitio­n of Shanxi’s anti-corruption efforts.” Li Guoxiang, research fellow at the Shanxi Provincial Academy of Social Sciences

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