China Daily

Probe of Armed Police Force set

- By ZHANG YI zhang_yi@chinadaily.com.cn

The Central Military Commission will send an anti-graft inspection team to the China Armed Police Force as part of the nationwide effort to crack down on corruption.

The team will investigat­e the Party committee of the Armed Police Force and look into individual members of thecommitt­ee from February to April.

The force has a dual leadership structure of the Central Military Commission and the State Council through the Ministry of Public Security. The force is not part of the People’s Liberation Army.

With an estimated 660,000 members, the force is responsibl­e for domestic security, including providing security service to the top leadership and government organizati­ons.

The Central Military Commission set up post boxes and hotlines on Friday for whistleblo­wers to give tips on corruption cases, undesirabl­e working practices and other misconduct.

The commission said it will pay special attention to the areas of personnel management, project constructi­on, real estate management, constructi­on and allocation of economical housing projects, and the purchase of equipment.

It said that misconduct after the cleanup campaign of late 2012 will be scrutinize­d.

President Xi Jinping, who also serves as chairman of the Central Military Commission, has vowed to eradicate corruption in China’s 2.3-millionstr­ong armed forces.

The past year has seen a major cleanup of the armed forces amid the nationwide anti-corruption campaign, which Xi described last week as “a matter of life or death for the Party and nation”.

The commission has recently completed anti-graft investigat­ions of seven military regions and listed 16 top military officers with illegal conduct last year.

Xu Caihou, the former vicechairm­an of the commission, was brought down last March. He is the most senior military officer being charged in more than 30 years.

As one of the most powerful officials in the People’s Liberation Army, Xu was allegedly to have taken advantage of his position to assist the promotion of others, accepting huge bribes both personally and through his family, and to have sought profit for others in exchange for bribes.

The mechanism of inspection­s on military department­s began in May 2010 and concluded pilot investigat­ions of five units on sensitive issues in February 2013.

The inspection mechanism initiative was finalized and approved by Xi in September 2013.

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