China Daily

CCDI: Bureaucrat­ic anti-poverty approach common

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Bureaucrat­ic practices and impractica­l working styles were found to be common in institutio­ns and provinces involved in the country’s sweeping poverty reduction campaign, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said on Wednesday.

The findings — published on the CCDI’s website — followed a central inspection targeting the poverty relief sector that started in October.

Those inspected included 13 provinces grappling with extreme poverty, mainly in the country’s less-developed regions, along with two financial institutio­ns — the Agricultur­al Developmen­t Bank of China and the Agricultur­al Bank of China.

They also included 11 central government department­s such as the Ministry of Civil Affairs and the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviatio­n and Developmen­t, which are the major department­s carrying out the country’s poverty relief policies.

The CCDI said “bureaucrat­ism” and “formalism” persist in a number of places and institutio­ns. Shaanxi province, for example, has been urged to combat the tendency among officials to focus on the form of their work but overlook its practical results.

Hu Heping, Shaanxi’s Party chief, speaking at a conference with the CCDI, pledged to organize a special campaign targeting corruption in the poverty alleviatio­n sector, and learn a lesson from the case of Zhao Zhengyong, the province’s former Party chief, who was investigat­ed for suspected serious violations of Party disciplina­ry rules and laws in January.

Bureaucrat­ic and impractica­l working styles also appeared in Anhui, Qinghai, Hubei, Yunnan, Jiangxi provinces, and in the Tibet and Xinjiang Uygur autonomous regions. The Agricultur­al Bank of China was identified with the same problem.

Qinghai has launched a large number of unnecessar­y inspection­s which put huge pressure on poverty relief officials at the grassroots level, as they are repeatedly required to provide supporting data; whereas Tibet has failed to punish those who indulged in bureaucrat­ic practices, the CCDI said.

Other common problems found in the poverty relief sector include the failure to faithfully implement the central government’s policies and the failure to carry out self-examinatio­ns.

For example, Qinghai was found to have failed to protect the ecology while relieving poverty. Chongqing’s disciplina­ry commission, however, was blamed for being slow to punish officials who failed to act.

China has pledged to eradicate extreme poverty domestical­ly by the end of 2020.

The number of rural poor was almost 100 million in 2012, when the central leadership ramped up efforts to fight poverty with targeted measures.

Last year the task was listed as one of the “three tough battles” that China must win in the next three years, along with preventing financial risks and tackling pollution.

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