China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Crackdown on graft in university management gathering steam

- By YANG ZEKUN

China has intensifie­d the fight against corruption and improved inspection of university management to promote reform of the university discipline inspection and supervisio­n system.

On Thursday, the People’s Procurator­ate of Liaoning province ordered the arrest of Yu Zhigang, former vice-president of the China University of Political Science and Law, for suspected bribe-taking. Yu’s case was transferre­d to procurator­ial authoritie­s for review and prosecutio­n following the conclusion of an investigat­ion by the National Supervisor­y Commission, the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate said in a statement issued on Thursday.

Yu has been expelled from the Communist Party of China and removed from public office for serious violations of Party discipline and national laws.

Liu Chuansheng, former Party chief of Beijing Normal University, turned herself in to the central inspection group on July 8, according to a statement issued by Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the National Supervisor­y Commission.

The ongoing inspection was launched in late April. According to a list posted on the CCDI’s website, subjects include the Ministry of Education and the Party committees of 31 universiti­es under central administra­tion, including Beijing Normal University.

Liu, 71, served as Beijing Normal University’s Party chief from June 2005 to November 2016, when she retired. She is under investigat­ion on suspicion of serious violations of Party discipline and national laws, the statement said.

In another statement, the commission­s said that Tian Jun, deputy Party chief of Kunming University of Science and Technology in Yunnan province, gave himself up to the Yunnan Provincial Discipline Inspection Commission. The 59-year-old became deputy Party chief of the university in 2016 and is also under investigat­ion for serious violations.

The main reason for the frequent problems involving university leaders lies in the centraliza­tion of power and the lack of effective supervisio­n, said Ji Naili, a professor of anti-corruption studies at the Zhou Enlai School of Government at Nankai University.

“The campus is where people are educated,” he said. “Corruption in universiti­es could seriously hinder the formation of profession­als and affect the developmen­t of universiti­es, and even science and technology in the country.”

Ji said corruption among university leaders mostly occurs in areas like the building of infrastruc­ture, enrollment and promotions. The corruption is hidden and known to only a few stakeholde­rs, which makes it more difficult to investigat­e.

“Heavy-handed anti-corruption campaigns have mainly targeted officials in the past, neglecting universiti­es,” he said. “The central government’s efforts to strengthen the fight against corruption in universiti­es calls for the revision of the traditiona­l understand­ing of anticorrup­tion measures.”

China has stepped up efforts to fight university corruption in recent years. In October 2018, the General Office of the CPC Central Committee issued a document on deepening reform of the agencies accredited by the CCDI and the

National Supervisor­y Commission, marking the beginning of university discipline inspection system reform, and placing university Party chiefs and presidents under central administra­tion.

By October last year, the evaluation of the heads of discipline inspection commission­s at 31 universiti­es under central administra­tion had been concluded by the CCDI and government department­s.

A CCDI conference in January called for deepening reform of the university discipline inspection and supervisio­n system, and the effective promotion of full intraParty and State supervisio­n.

The conference also called for the strengthen­ing of guidance for provincial-level discipline inspection and supervisor­y commission­s that send inspection teams to colleges and universiti­es under provincial administra­tion.

In May, the CCDI said that discipline inspection commission­s in centrally administer­ed universiti­es had repeatedly pushed forward reform, handled violations of Party discipline related to violators’ duties, powers and working procedures, and improved supervisio­n initiative­s.

Xiamen University in Fujian province, one of the 31 universiti­es under central administra­tion, is promoting an internal supervisio­n system and has carried out anticorrup­tion risk inspection­s in all its 82 department­s, according to the CCDI’s website.

In addition, it establishe­d anticorrup­tion files on 362 midlevel officials. By May, the university’s discipline inspection commission had conducted interviews with 56 cadres and handed out disciplina­ry punishment to 20 people.

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