China Daily (Hong Kong)

Anti-graft efforts stepped up

Priorities include big department­s and companies, areas of concern to public

- By ZHANG YAN and CUI JIA Contact the writers at zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top anti-graft watchdog will step up supervisio­n efforts this year in larger department­s and industries with more funding and resources, according to an official communique. It will also resolutely prevent officials from being enlisted and corrupted by interest groups, it said.

The communique was published after the third plenary session of the 19th Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection was concluded in Beijing on Sunday.

More importantl­y, the commission will focus its anti-graft efforts in areas that concern the public the most, such as education, healthcare, environmen­tal protection and food and drug safety. Corrupt officials at the grassroots level will also be targeted, especially those who offer protection for mafia-like gangs and act like village tyrants, the communique said.

“China has had great achievemen­ts in fighting corruption, which has played an important role in economic developmen­t and social stability,” said Qi Zhenhong, director of the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies.

Anti-graft authoritie­s need to focus on fighting corruption in project bidding, appointing of officials, law enforcemen­t and administer­ing State-owned assets, Fu Kui, secretary of the CPC Hunan Discipline Inspection Commission, told the China Discipline Inspection and Supervisio­n Newspaper, the official publicatio­n of the CCDI. They also need to target officials who are corrupt both financiall­y and politicall­y, Fu said.

Anti-corruption efforts in financial fields should be stepped up, particular­ly in key projects, areas and positions that concern the country’s overall developmen­t and security, Xi Jinping, general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, said on Friday during the three-day plenary session.

Wang Xingning, secretary of the CPC Shaanxi Discipline Inspection Commission, told the China Discipline Inspection and Supervisio­n Newspaper that the local commission plans to use confession­s of corrupt officials and case studies to warn others to avoid such behavior.

Since the 18th CPC National Congress in 2012, Party officials, especially high-ranking officials, have received clear requiremen­ts on intra-Party activities as part of the all-out effort to enforce strict Party discipline. This year, the Party vows to firmly fight against formality for formality’s sake and bureaucrat­ism. Those who make vague statements, act perfunctor­ily and are slack at work will be punished, the communique said.

The sweeping victory secured so far in the anti-graft campaign must be further consolidat­ed this year so that officials don’t dare to, are unable to and have no desire to commit acts of corruption, it said. The nation and Party’s oversight system will also be further improved, the communique added.

Around 621,000 people were punished for corruption last year, including 51 officials at or above the provincial or ministeria­l level, according to the CCDI and the National Supervisor­y Commission, which was set up in 2018 as a part of efforts to reform the State supervisor­y system.

“The reform has helped to consolidat­e different anti-corruption forces. Now, supervisio­n authoritie­s need to refine the workflow so they can handle cases more efficientl­y,” said Guo Yong, director of Tsinghua University’s Center for Integrity and Governance Research.

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