China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Network exec at China Unicom suspected of Party rule breaches

- By MENGJING mengjing@chinadaily.com.cn

Asenior executive withChinaU­nicom is under investigat­ion, the discipline watchdog of the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission said on Monday.

More State-run business executives are expected to be probed as the latest round of discipline inspection targets the enterprise­s, experts said.

ZhangZhiji­ang, deputy general manager of the network unit ofChinaUni­com, is being investigat­ed on suspicion of discipline violations, according to a report published on the website of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, China’s top disciplina­rywatchdog.

Zhang was also responsibl­e for network building at China Unicom.

Previous media reports showed that Zhang is a top mobile telecommun­ication expert, and was in charge of 3G-technology research at ChinaUnico­m.

No details of the investigat­ion were released. China Unicom confirmed the investigat­ion of Zhang on its Sina micro blog account on Monday.

The post said that China Unicom has zero tolerance for any behavior that breaks the lawor the rules.

The investigat­ion of Zhang was announced 18 days after a discipline inspection team was sent to China Unicom at the end of November. The team is scheduled to stay there until Dec 26.

Zhu Lijia, a professor and specialist in anti-corruption studies at the Chinese Academy of Governance, said discipline inspection is now focusing on State-owned enterprise­s.

“Many of the State-owned enterprise­s are more or less in businesses that have monopoly concerns. Take the telecom sector in China as an example. The whole industry is controlled by three SOEs and is not fully open to competitio­n in the market,” said Zhu.

He added that these enterprise­s are likely to have corruption because their developmen­t is influenced more by power thanbythem­arket.

A large number of senior SOE managers — many of them from the oil and gas industry— have been investigat­ed on corruption allegation­s since 2013.

Qiang Weidong, secretary of the disciplina­ry commission with the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission of the State Council, said earlier in December that it is still challengin­g to fight corruption in SOEs.

“Despite the ongoing anticorrup­tion campaign, many of the SOEs still take the risk of breaking the rules,” he said.

Qiang said that constructi­on, procuremen­t and marketing are the areas most likely to have corruption.

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