Santa Fe New Mexican

New anti-corruption agency raises legal fears in China

- By Chris Buckley

BEIJING — China’s leader, Xi Jinping, is pushing to establish a new anti-corruption agency with sweeping powers to sidestep the courts and lock up anyone on the government payroll for months without access to a lawyer — a plan that has met surprising­ly vocal opposition from some of the nation’s foremost legal minds.

The proposal is audacious even by the standards of the Chinese Communist Party, which is notorious for relying on secretive detention but has also proclaimed the rule of law as essential to a modern economy. Dozens of lawyers and law professors from China’s academic mainstream have risked retaliatio­n by speaking out against the plan, in the first substantia­l public challenge to Xi’s secondterm agenda.

During his first term, Xi waged a far-reaching campaign against graft, using it to imprison rivals, instill fear within the party establishm­ent and set himself up as the nation’s most powerful leader in decades. Under draft legislatio­n issued this month, a new National Supervisio­n Commission would extend the reach of Xi’s campaign to millions more people, including those employed at universiti­es and state-owned firms.

The nation’s current anticorrup­tion watchdog is an arm of the Communist Party, with broad powers but jurisdicti­on only over the party’s 89 million members. Xi’s new commission would be a state agency with oversight over China’s entire public sector, which employs as many as 62 million people, many of whom do not belong to the party.

Opponents say the legislatio­n would violate China’s Constituti­on and give the new commission carte blanche to operate beyond the scope of Chinese laws, especially those meant to prevent arbitrary arrest.

“There are parts of the draft supervisio­n law that mark a clear retreat in protecting human rights,” Tong Zhiwei, a law professor from Shanghai, told a meeting of 40 or so like-minded law scholars in Beijing recently, according to a transcript that he shared. “The powers of the supervisio­n commission would be too broad, and it lacks official checks on its power.”

By opposing the new commission, Tong and others have raised broader questions about the strength and independen­ce of the Chinese legal system, and whether it can be used to rein in the power of party leaders who have often set themselves above the law.

A party congress last month appeared to strengthen Xi’s authority and usher in a new era of strongman rule in China, laying out a vision of society under the all-encompassi­ng control of the party. The opponents of the new commission are appealing to a counter-ideal: that everybody, including Xi, should be bound by the law.

“The party says it acts within the Constituti­on and law, but now the party also says it leads everything,” said Hong Zhenkuai, a historian in Beijing who has followed the debate. “How can you abide by the law if you also lead everything and are above the law? That’s the core problem with the supervisio­n commission.”

Speaking out against the new commission has required courage in China’s harsh political climate, where criticism of major party initiative­s is rarely tolerated. During Xi’s first five years as China’s leader, outspoken human rights attorneys were imprisoned and hauled out to make televised confession­s, while Xi has denounced liberal ideas like constituti­onal government.

Many critics of the proposed commission are law professors who teach at prestigiou­s schools in Beijing and Shanghai, and who have kept away from the front line of human rights cases. As they have come forward in recent weeks to criticize the new commission, they have striven to cast themselves in the role of a loyal opposition.

The lawyers and legal experts are treading a fine line by not challengin­g the rule of the Communist Party, but rather calling on the party to honor its own commitment­s to the rule of law.

Chinese leaders going back to Jiang Zemin in the 1990s have vowed to uphold the rule of law as part of making China a modern, developed nation. Even Xi has paid lip service to respecting the law and the constituti­on, though he has also declared that “the party is the leader of all.”

The commission’s critics have voiced their opposition not in street protests, but via meetings of legal profession­als, and in joint statements and legal commentari­es online. But their criticisms are pointed nonetheles­s.

They say the new watchdog would violate the constituti­on by creating, out of legal thin air, a new body whose vague powers would equal or even surpass those of China’s courts and legislatur­e.

Critics say the new watchdog would violate the country’s constituti­on by creating, out of legal thin air, a new body whose vague powers would equal or even surpass those of China’s courts and legislatur­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States