China Daily Global Weekly

Xi emphasizes anti-graft fight

Addressing the Party watchdog, top leader reinforces message of zero tolerance for corruption

- By CAO DESHENG caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, stressed the need to further exercise full and rigorous governance over the Party and vowed zero tolerance for corruption.

Xi, who is also China’s president and chairman of the Central Military Commission, made the remarks on Jan 9 while addressing the second plenary session of the 20th CPC Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, which opened in Beijing that day.

Stressing that the situation in the battle against corruption remains serious and complex, Xi said resolute efforts must be made to investigat­e and deal with corruption that involves both political and economic elements, and to resolutely prevent leading officials from acting on behalf of any interest groups or powerful groups.

He called for preventing collusion between officials and businesspe­ople and guarding against infiltrati­on by capital into the political field in order to prevent such wrongdoing­s from underminin­g the political ecosystem or economic developmen­t. Laws and regulation­s to punish bribery should be further improved, he added.

Since the 18th CPC National Congress in 2012, the CPC Central Committee has made continuous efforts to improve Party conduct, uphold integrity and combat corruption with unpreceden­ted courage and resolve.

As a result of high-profile anti-corruption campaigns, some 81,000 people have voluntaril­y surrendere­d to disciplina­ry inspection and supervisio­n agencies over the past five years, Xinhua News Agency reported.

Addressing the 20th CPC National Congress in October, Xi said, “As the largest Marxist governing party in the world, we must always stay alert and determined to tackle the special challenges that a large party like ours faces, so as to maintain the people’s support and consolidat­e our position as the long-term governing party.”

Within just over a month after the closing of the 20th CPC National Congress, more than 10 officials who were suspected of severe violations of discipline and laws had turned themselves in.

At the Jan 9 meeting, Xi emphasized that exercising full and rigorous self-governance over the Party is a long-term, strategic issue that matters to the Party’s long-term ruling of the country, the nation’s long-lasting stability and the people’s well-being.

He urged continuous efforts to achieve the strategic goal that officials do not dare, are not able and have no desire to become corrupt.

Strong political supervisio­n must be conducted to ensure that the decisions and policies unveiled at the 20th CPC National Congress are faithfully implemente­d, he added.

Xi also called for continuous efforts to implement the “eight-point decision on improving conduct”, which was first made public in December 2012 and targets formalism, bureaucrat­ism, hedonism and extravagan­ce and seeks to rein in privilege-seeking attitudes and behavior.

In order to improve Party conduct, Xi said consistent and sustained efforts should be made to identify problems specific to certain areas, sectors and periods of time, and to go to great lengths to tackle prevalent and recurrent problems.

Tackling formalism and bureaucrat­ism should be given greater prominence as a significan­t task in improving Party conduct, he added.

Xi underscore­d the importance of tightening Party discipline and urged Party officials to stick to the Party Constituti­on.

While stressing the Party’s unified leadership over anti-corruption work, Xi also urged disciplina­ry inspection and supervisio­n department­s to assume their responsibi­lities and effectivel­y fulfill their duties in the tough battle against corruption.

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