China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Environmen­tal inspection­s catch hundreds of officials

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

More than 900 officials have been held to account for violations that were found in a central environmen­tal inspection last year, the country’s top pollution watchdog said on Thursday.

The officials were involved in 92 violations in seven provincial regions, including Shanxi and Hunan provinces and Tianjin municipali­ty, the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t said in a statement released to the media.

The violations were found after a third batch of central environmen­tal inspection teams — all headed by ministeria­l level officials — visited the regions from April to May 2017. Violators were transferre­d to provincial authoritie­s for further investigat­ion and punishment.

Of the officials, 698 were punished by administra­tive or Party disciplina­ry agencies, including receiving demerits or warnings, according to the release.

Officials who receive such punishment­s may be barred from promotion for a period of time.

The statement also said that 189 officials had been summoned and another 22 had been transferre­d to judicial authoritie­s. It added that the punished officials are from local committees of the Communist Party of China, local government­s, State-owned enterprise­s and public institutes.

According to the inspection teams, derelictio­n of duty is to blame for many of the 92 environmen­tal violations that were found. Some officials violated laws and regulation­s to give the green light to developmen­t projects.

Tianjin, for example, punished 83 officials for 11 environmen­tal violations. In one case, 17 officials were punished because they failed to follow through on the constructi­on of garbage treatment facilities as planned in five districts, which postponed the biosafety disposal of a large amount of waste and resulted in the illegal disposal of landfill materials.

Wang Chunxia, a former prefecture-level official in the Tianjin landscape authority, which oversees constructi­on of garbage treatment plants, was given a warning within the Party, and Xu Liqun, former head of Tianjin’s household waste treatment center, was given a serious warning within the Party. Both have been shifted to other posts unrelated to waste treatment.

In a media release published on Thursday, the Tianjin government asked all of its officials to learn from these violations and strengthen their efforts to control air, soil and water pollution.

It also vowed to hold environmen­tal violators accountabl­e in the strictest manner to ensure full implementa­tion of the central government’s environmen­tal policies.

“The central environmen­tal inspection has played an important role in promoting a sense of duty within local government­s for safeguardi­ng the environmen­t,” said Ma Yong, secretary-general of the China Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on and Green Developmen­t Foundation.

Officials of local government­s have been attaching more importance to environmen­tal protection, and the inspection­s will hold them accountabl­e if their failures lead to environmen­tal violations, he said.

However, Ma said, detailed rules on the conduct of investigat­ions and assignment of responsibi­lity for environmen­tal violations are needed to ensure that are punished the right people.

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