China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Panels fine-tune anti-graft efforts

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

The establishm­ent of supervisor­y commission­s at various levels and their working together with the disciplina­ry authoritie­s of the Communist Party of China are not to enlarge the power of discipline inspectors but to make anti-graft efforts more concentrat­ed and standardiz­ed, a senior discipline official said on Thursday.

“The establishm­ent of supervisor­y commission­s is to integrate anti-corruption resources and power separated in different department­s, such as in corruption prevention and prosecutin­g authoritie­s, to form a joint force,” said Xiao Pei, deputy head of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the Party’s top discipline watchdog.

He made the remark at a news conference while explaining the report made at the beginning of the 19th CPC National Congress, which ended on Tuesday.

General Secretary of the CPC Central Committee Xi Jinping said while making a report to the congress on Oct 18 that the Party must strengthen checks on and oversight over the exercise of power and that supervisor­y commission­s at the national, provincial, city and county levels will be set up.

“A national supervisio­n law will be formulated. Supervisor­y commission­s will be given responsibi­lities, powers and means of investigat­ion in accordance with law,” Xi said. “The practice of shuanggui will be replaced by detention.”

Shuanggui is a form of intraparty disciplina­ry action that requires a Party member under investigat­ion to cooperate with questionin­g at a designated place and time.

Xiao said many investigat­ory measures employed by disciplina­ry inspectors are expected to be written into the law and better regulated.

“The national supervisor­y commission is not a judicial body. Its duty is to supervise, investigat­e and handle major duty-related crimes such as corruption,” Xiao said.

Xiao said the law will include strict regulation­s on

The national supervisor­y commission is not a judicial body.”

Xiao Pei, deputy head of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection

approval procedures, conditions for use and time limits for detention. Rules on how to ensure the security and medical care of those questioned will also be written into the law, he said.

“That will make our anticorrup­tion drive more codified,” he said.

At the end of last year, a supervisor­y commission pilot program started in three provincial-level regions — Beijing, Shanxi and Zhejiang. In June, the first draft of the national supervisio­n law was submitted to the top legislatur­e for first review.

Zhang Shuofu, head of Beijing’s Discipline Inspection Commission, said that the capital has completed the trial period and all public servants in the capital have been brought under oversight.

“We’ve put 997,000 civil servants on the supervisio­n list, 787,000 more than before,” he said.

Supervisor­y commission­s at the city level and at district levels have been set up in Beijing, he said.

“We’ve issued 36 rules to coordinate work among the supervisor­y commission­s, judicial and law enforcemen­t department­s, ensuring each move is based in law,” he said.

Li Chengyan, head of Peking University’s Center for Anti-Corruption Studies, said supervisor­y committees have been establishe­d to upgrade the fight against graft and make it more standardiz­ed.

Zhu Lijia, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Governance, said it is the time to extend the pilot program across the country, and he expects clearer rules on the operation of the supervisor­y system.

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