China Daily (Hong Kong)

27 NPC deputies forced out for corruption

- By ZHANG YI zhang_yi@chinadaily.com.cn

As a result of the national antigraft drive, 27 deputies to China’s top legislatur­e have been dismissed or forced to resign since last March after they were placed under investigat­ion for corruption.

According to thepaper.cn, one of the leading websites for exposing graft to the public, the deputies include government officials and heads of Stateowned enterprise­s. An official familiar with National People’s Congress procedures said more than a dozen newly elected deputies will fill the vacancies, bringing the number of deputies to an estimated 2,960 in this year’s session.

The NPC and local people’s congresses at all levels are the organs through which the people exercise state power. NPC deputies serve for five years and meet annually in a session that lasts about 10 days, starting from March 5. In 2014, 2,983 members represente­d more than 1.3 billion people in China in the session.

Under the country’s Constituti­on, the NPC is endowed with the power to legislate, to oversee the operations of the government and to elect major State officers, including those in administra­tive, judicial and procurator­ial organs.

Among the recently dismissed deputies are four who “seriously violated Party discipline and laws”, a euphemism for corruption. They are Li Zhongjun, former chief of a grain depot of China Grain Reserves Corp in Heilongjia­ng province; Feng Jun, former general manager of State Grid Shanghai Municipal Electric Power Co; Lu Wucheng, former deputy head of the top legislatur­e in Gansu province; and Liu Zheng, former deputy head of the General Logistics Department of the People’s Liberation Army.

Three deputies resigned after being accused of “serious violations of Party discipline”. They are Cao Yong, former head of the Commerce Department in Anhui province; Liang Yimin, former Party chief in Maoming, Guangdong province; and Huang Shunfu, former head of Sichuan Provincial Investment Group.

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