China Daily

Beijing official removed from post

- By ZHANG YAN and ZHANG YI zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

Lyu Xiwen, Beijing’s former deputy Party chief and the first high-ranking official placed under investigat­ion in the capital, has been expelled from the Party and removed from her post for serious violations of discipline, authoritie­s said on Tuesday.

Lyu, born in 1955, ranked third in the Party’s Beijing Committee after the capital’s Party chief, Guo Jinlong, and its mayor, Wang Anshun. She is the third high-ranking female official tobe investigat­edfor alleged gr aft issues since the 18th Party Congress in 2012, when the new leadership took office.

According to the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the country’s top graft-buster, Lyu seriously violated political discipline­s to breach the central authority’s guiding principles and major policies, and she formed cliques to go against the Party’s censorship.

The CCDI said she was suspected of illegally selecting and appointing Party officials and interferin­g in personnel arrangemen­ts. She allegedly used her position to gain benefits for family members in their business projects, and is suspected of abusing her power to benefit other enterprise­s and accepting huge bribes.

In addition, she was accused of intervenin­g in market economic activities and law enforcemen­t actions. She also violated Party discipline­s by living a luxurious lifestyle and frequentin­g private clubs and entertainm­ent venues, the commission said.

The watchdog said it will transfer evidence in the case to the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate for further investigat­ion.

In November, Lyu was put under investigat­ion by the commission for suspected “serious disciplina­ry violation”. Beijing is the last provincial-level region on the Chinese mainland to investigat­e allegedly corrupt top officials since the 18th Party Congress.

In another developmen­t, Zhang Lebin, former deputy head of the National Bureau of Religious Affairs, has been investigat­ed for serious discipline violation, the commission said on Tuesday.

Zhang is suspected of seriously violating political and Party discipline­s to form cliques, abusing his power to gain benefits for others and accepting bribes, it said.

Zhang has been expelled from the Party and removed from his post, the watchdog added, and evidence in his case will be transferre­d to judicial authoritie­s for further investigat­ion.

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