China Daily (Hong Kong)

Conviction­s herald a prolonged fight

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Eight provincial and ministeria­l officials were sentenced to terms of up to life in prison for graft on Wednesday, highlighti­ng that China’s sweeping fight against corruption is far from over. Among the convicted, four officials were found guilty of accepting bribes worth over 100 million yuan ($14.7 million), including Liu Zhigeng, former vicegovern­or of Guangdong province and Wang Baoan, former head of the National Bureau of Statistics.

The sentences came after last week’s execution of Zhao Liping, a former senior political adviser in northern China’s Inner Mongolia autonomous region, for intentiona­l homicide, taking bribes and possession of firearms.

Dai Yanjun, from the Party School of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, said that the conviction­s of these eight “big tigers” are a sign of a prolonged anti-graft campaign.

“These cases serve as warnings that the fight against corruption remains fierce and complicate­d although it has gained crushing momentum,” Dai said.

After taking office in late 2012, the current CPC leadership has declared a crack- down on graft and identified the need to guarantee that officials dare not be corrupt.

China’s court system concluded 45,000 graft cases implicatin­g 63,000 people in 2016, with 35 former officials at the provincial and ministeria­l level or above, and 240 at the prefectura­l level, convicted, according to the work report of the Supreme People’s Court.

“These cases have won the CPC time to treat the root causes of corruption,” said Dai.

The verdicts of these senior officials were meted out before the 19th CPC National Congress, at which a new CPC central committee and a new anti-graft body will be elected.

“It shows the fight against corruption will not weaken and the zero-tolerance policy will not change, thus dismissing speculatio­n that the antigraft fight would come to an end as the current leadership is to end its tenure,” Dai said.

Creating a tighter and more extensive net against corruption, the graft watchdog has been busy hunting “foxes”, corrupt officials suspected of economic crimes hiding abroad, as well as the crackdown on corrupt officials from low-level “flies” to high-ranking “tigers”.

More than 1,000 fugitives were returned from abroad in 2016, including China’s mostwanted graft fugitive, Yang Xiuzhu.

Wang Yukai, with the Chinese Academy of Governance, said the “crushing momentum” is a landmark in the battle against graft.

“The next step will focus on preventing corruption cases from emerging by strengthen­ing supervisio­n of corrupt officials,” Wang said.

Apart from improving and tightening disciplina­ry regulation­s within the CPC, China is on track to establish a national supervisio­n system which will oversee all public servants.

The National People’s Congress Standing Committee, the top legislatur­e, approved a pilot reform program last year to establish an integrated supervisio­n system that will see the establishm­ent of local supervisor­y commission­s at three levels — province, city and county.

Supervisor­y commission­s have been set up in Beijing municipali­ty and the provinces of Shanxi and Zhejiang, as an initial step toward establishi­ng a national supervisor­y commission.

The commission will investigat­e and punish anyone implicated in corruption or other job-related offenses. Any serious cases will be transferre­d to procurator­ates for criminal investigat­ion.

“It is an arduous task to reduce existing corruption and contain any rise in corruption because there is still space for corruption to evolve,” Dai noted. “Any letup in the intensity of the antigraft fight could spoil everything that has been achieved.”

“The fight against corruption has no end. It will always continue,” he said.

Any letup in the intensity of the anti-graft fight could spoil everything that has been achieved.”

Dai Yanjun, professor at the Party School of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China

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