• Thu
  • Oct 3, 2013
  • Updated: 3:04am

Xi Jinping

Xi Jinping was elected General Secretary of the Chinese Communisty Party and Chairman of the Central Military Commission in18th Party Congress in 2012, replacing Hu Jintao as the top leader as the Communist Party. Xi was elected China's president in March 2013. Born in 1953, Xi is son of Xi Zhongxun, a veteran leader of the Party. He graduated from Tsinghua University in 1979 with a degree in engineering.

 

NewsChina
CORRUPTION

2,290 party members disciplined over graft

Crackdown will have limited effect unless checks on power are introduced, observers say

Thursday, 01 August, 2013, 5:27am

Lavish weddings, fancy holidays and lunchtime wine on the public dime were among transgressions detailed on Tuesday that led the Communist Party to discipline 2,290 officials so far this year in a frugality campaign aimed at addressing public anger.

The party's disciplinary arm, quoted in state media, provided eight examples of such breaches, including a party chief in a township in Hebei province who was stripped of his post for holding an extravagant wedding for his daughter and receiving around 1 million yuan (HK$1.26 million) in cash and gifts.

They remain only the traditional way of fighting corruption, by using campaigns and iron-fisted administrative methods. There has been no progress in developing an anti-corruption mechanism
Hu Xingdou, a political economist at the Beijing Institute of Technology

Party officials, led by President Xi Jinping, hail their efforts to eradicate extravagance among cadres as evidence that they are serious about cracking down on graft. But while it might seem as though many officials have been admonished this year as part of the campaign, the number is small given the party's 85 million members.

Official reports have not indicated the seniority of the officials who were being punished, though most of the examples listed appeared to be mid and low-level cadres. Xi has promised to target even high-level officials, who are usually seen as enjoying the protection that comes with ties to the politically powerful.

One analyst said such campaigns are only of limited use because they addressed only the symptoms of corruption rather than focus efforts on building systematic checks on power.

"Of course these are helpful to anti-corruption efforts, but they remain only the traditional way of fighting corruption, by using campaigns and iron-fisted administrative methods," said Hu Xingdou , a political economist at the Beijing Institute of Technology. "There has been no progress in developing an anti-corruption mechanism."

Hu said such a mechanism would include requiring officials to declare their assets, allowing for greater press freedom and stronger oversight of official organs. "There is an even greater need for work on this front," he said.

The 2,290 officials cited were punished for violating new guidelines aimed at curbing waste, Xinhua cited Xu Chuanzhi, a party official, as saying.

A community leader in the central city of Wuhan who led 10 staffers on a holiday in southern Hainan paid for by government funds was given a serious warning while staffers were ordered to return the funds spent on the vacation, it said.

In central Hunan , the head of the provincial-level judicial bureau was handed a warning for hosting a massive wedding banquet for his son while 10 officials who misused police cars as part of the celebrations were also admonished. The campaign comes as more individuals have stepped forward to publicly accuse senior officials of wrongdoing. The allegations test the new leadership's resolve to fight graft at the highest levels.

Liu Hu , a reporter with the New Express Daily, publicly accused the deputy head of China's industry regulator, the State Administration for Industry and Commerce, of failing in his previous duties as an official in China's southwestern megacity of Chongqing.

 

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