China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Anti-graft agencies set to be realigned

- By CAO YIN in Beijing caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s four-year anticorrup­tion fight will produce a new institutio­n, called a supervisor­y commission, to integrate separate and less effective corruption control authoritie­s.

Three provincial-level supervisor­y commission­s are being assembled as a test in Beijing, Shanxi and Zhejiang provinces following approval by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, in December

Whether the program will be extended is uncertain, but the three test commission­s are expected to be ready by the end of March, according to the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the nation’s top anti-corruption watchdog.

The CCDI also said commission­s at city and county levels in the three jurisdicti­ons will be finished by the end of June.

Legal experts call the supervisor­y commission a more efficient anti-corruption institutio­n, adding that it will be good to give more structure to the country’s supervisor­y bodies.

In a departure from the fragmented supervisio­n bodies inside government­al department­s — such as corruption prevention bureaus and disciplina­ry inspection authoritie­s — the pilot program would have the three regions integrate their local supervisor­y resources into the newly built commission­s.

Yang Weidong, a law professor with the Chinese Academy of Governance, said that the fight against corruption will be more institutio­nalized and the nation’s supervisor­y structure much clearer as a result.

Currently, Chinese prosecutin­g authoritie­s not only investigat­e crimes such as derelictio­n

of duty and bribery, they also prosecute the suspected offenders. This mixture of functions can weaken overall effectiven­ess, Yang said.

“For example, the head of the anti-corruption bureau within a prosecutin­g authority usually is also the authority’s deputy chief procurator. That may bring graft risks and a negative influence on the ability to supervise itself,” he said.

After the independen­t commission­s are formed, the role of investigat­ion will be separated from the prosecutin­g authoritie­s, “which can increase mutual restrictio­ns between the two functions and make our efforts against graft more systematic,” he added.

Ma Huaide, a law professor at China University of Political Science and Law, said that the commission­s reflect a newly emerging supervisio­n structure. Instead of having the supervisor­y bodies inside government offices, having “supervisor­y organs in parallel with the government bodies will make the national supervisio­n system more powerful.”

The heads of the commission­s will be elected by people’s congresses and they will answer to the legislativ­e body at their own level, as well as to higher-level supervisor­y commission­s, the legislatur­e mandated.

The pilot commission­s are authorized to supervise, investigat­e and punish all public employees, such as civil servants, in their own region, the legislatur­e said. Also, they have been given 12 tools to do the job, such as interrogat­ion, detention and freezing assets, the legislatur­e said.

Executives of Stateowned enterprise­s and administra­tors in government entities, such as medical, cultural, research, educationa­l and sport industries, also will fall under the supervisio­n of the commission­s.

Wang Qishan, secretary of the national Party CCDI, said in November that such supervisio­n commission­s are “anticorrup­tion agencies by their nature”.

Since the 18th CPC National People’s Congress in 2012, China has stepped up its anti-corruption efforts, and a series of officials, including some at ministeria­l level, have stood trial or been sentenced in crimes related to their duties.

In addition, new rules issued by the Party over the past few months also demonstrat­e the strong determinat­ion to fight corruption systematic­ally, the experts added.

(The commission) can make our efforts against graft more systematic.” YANG WEIDONG, a law professor with the Chinese Academy of Governance

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