China Daily Global Weekly

Efforts urged to curb corruption

Xi calls for more education, supervisio­n as cases involving younger Party members come to light

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

Efforts are being urged to better educate the next generation of the Communist Party of China, as the corruption of younger officials has come increasing­ly to the forefront in recent years.

The education, management and supervisio­n of younger officials should be expanded to guide them to be loyal and reliable cadres of the Party and the people, Xi Jinping, general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, said on Jan 25 while addressing the sixth plenary session of the 19th Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the CPC.

Younger officials should often consider the Party’s theory and policies, rules and discipline, as well as their own original aspiration­s, to see clearly whether certain things should be done, and to guard themselves against corruption, he said at the session of the Party’s top discipline watchdog.

Recent corruption cases, revealed by disciplina­ry authoritie­s, involving public servants born in the 1990s have drawn attention. The corrupt public servants gained large amounts of money to spend on luxuries, online gambling and games.

Shao Jingjun, a researcher in the commission’s research section, said in an article he wrote on the issue that “their corruption is not for money, power or sex, like high-ranking officials, but for ‘fun’”.

“They indulge in extravagan­ce and waste and when they are caught, the money is gone,” Shao said in his article published in Chinese Cadres Tribune, a monthly theory magazine sponsored by the Party School of the Central Committee of the CPC.

Their corrupt methods, which often involve digital payments and documents falsified by computer, are more hidden, he said.

A documentar­y about China’s anti-graft efforts broadcast on television last week revealed details of a young government worker who was sentenced to life in prison in 2020 after being found guilty of embezzling nearly 70 million yuan ($11 million) of government funds.

Zhang Yujie, born in 1995, worked at the real estate registrati­on center in Chuzhou, Anhui province. His corruption began in 2016, when he dealt with a service that holds prospectiv­e homebuyers’ funds in escrow.

Zhang deposited a client’s cash on his own bank card, as payment through bank cards is allowed, and said he would transfer the client’s payment to an escrow service the following day.

However, that night while playing an online game, he could not stop himself from spending all the money on the game.

“At first, I was terrified. I thought I could save for a while and return the money,” Zhang said in the fiveepisod­e documentar­y titled Zero Tolerance.

Zhang had gone through the client’s funds by constantly paying for virtual equipment in an online game to improve his place in the competitio­n. He became one of top players of the game.

From 2016 to 2019, Zhang embezzled public funds over 400 times.

In 2019, Zhang planned to get married and bought a villa in his girlfriend’s name with illegally gained money. He then resigned from his job, hoping to get off scot-free.

Fang Yangqing, an anti-corruption official in Chuzhou, said the derelictio­n of duty that was exposed is truly shocking and it was a pity that no one noticed or warned Zhang.

Nineteen officials were punished, including the head and deputy head of the real estate registrati­on center’s transactio­n management department, who both received prison sentences for derelictio­n of duty.

Shao, the researcher at the commission, said the root cause of corruption among young cadres lies in a lack of firm ideals. They relaxed their self-restraint in the initial stage of their careers and lost themselves after gaining more authority on the job.

The possibilit­y of graft among frontline public servants who are not leading officials is often overlooked, he added.

Shao said that although the problem occurs among a small group, it should be brought to more people’s attention. Education and supervisio­n of younger officials should be strengthen­ed and related systems must be improved.

Party organizati­ons should promptly criticize and correct their members’ minor problems, such as accepting small gifts, he said, adding that petty corruption will “gnaw their hearts like termites eating wood”.

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