China Daily

Political, legal black sheep to be targeted

Rectificat­ion of problems in system and personnel to bolster public trust

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

China has launched a nationwide operation to rectify problems in the country’s political and legal system and remove black sheep.

At the launch of the campaign in Beijing on Saturday, Guo Shengkun, head of the Communist Party of China Central Committee’s Political and Legal Affairs Commission, urged the rectificat­ion of deep-rooted problems in the system and its personnel to enable the building up of public trust.

Guo said that while most political and legal personnel can be trusted by the Party and the people, there are still some problemati­c areas.

The campaign will be carried out in two phases. The first, to the end of June, is targeting political and legal commission­s and department­s at the city and county levels, as well as provincial prisons and drug rehabilita­tion centers.

The second phase, from August to the end of October, will inspect political and legal commission­s and department­s at the central and provincial levels.

The campaign will focus on chronic problems in the political and legal system that affect the fairness of law enforcemen­t and the judiciary and adopt targeted countermea­sures, he said.

All political and legal department­s have been asked to accurately identify and review prominent issues and dig out the in-depth causes to eliminate the soil breeding such problems.

Problems such as personnel refusing to file cases or investigat­e registered cases and violators’ guilt, as well as judicial officers inappropri­ately contacting lawyers and illegally dealing with commutatio­n, parole and probation, will be targeted.

The operation will also address deep-seated troubles exposed by a crackdown on organized crime, and all divisions of the political and legal system will be inspected to thoroughly investigat­e “protective umbrellas” for organized crime and corruption in law enforcemen­t and the judiciary, Guo said.

People who conduct self-examinatio­ns and turn themselves in will receive more lenient punishment, but violators who refuse to confess and are subsequent­ly uncovered by the authoritie­s will be strictly penalized.

All department­s have been asked to explain the policy well to staff members, with leading cadres expected to take the lead in self-inspection.

Leniency for those confessing to violations will have its limits, and it cannot make their mistakes sound less serious or reduce them to nothing at all, Guo said, adding that punishment must follow relevant regulation­s and procedures and avoid wrongful conviction­s.

The national leading group for the rectificat­ion campaign has set up a platform for reporting violations by political and legal personnel, and all local authoritie­s will set up similar platforms.

The commission launched a five-month pilot rectificat­ion campaign in July focused on 35 units with 16,000 personnel, with 2,247 of them penalized for various violations.

Authoritie­s in Harbin — capital of Heilongjia­ng province and one of the pilot cities — combined the rectificat­ion campaign with the crackdown on organized crime and smashed a mafia-style gang. They captured 58 gang members and their “protective umbrellas”, and seized assets worth 240 million yuan ($37 million).

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