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Xi Jinping's anti-corruption campaign
China

Chinese military rallies behind graft crackdown after general Xu Caihou's fall

'We hold the guns and cannot give hiding space to corrupt elements,' PLA says in a statement for unity

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Xu Caihou, then vice-chairman of the Central Military Commission, which he later helmed, has recently been accused for graft and expelled from the party. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

China’s military today called for unity and loyalty to the ruling Communist Party after Xu Caihou, one of its most senior former officers, was accused of corruption – the highest-ranking official to date felled in a battle against pervasive graft.

Xu, who retired as vice-chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission (CMC) last year and from the party’s decision-making Politburo in 2012, was also expelled from the party and will face court martial.

President Xi Jinping heads the CMC, which controls the 2.3 million-strong armed forces, the world's largest, and has repeatedly reminded them to be loyal to the party.

[The PLA must] resolutely endorse the correct decision of the party's centre ... the Central Military Commission and Chairman Xi
PLA Daily

In a front page commentary, the military's official People's Liberation Army Daily called on its forces to “resolutely endorse the correct decision of the party's centre ... the Central Military Commission and Chairman Xi”.

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“Our military is an armed bloc which carries out the ruling party's political mission, and must have high standards when it comes to building a clean party and government,” it said, on a day that also marks 93 years since the party was founded.

“The military holds the barrels of the guns, and cannot give hiding space to corrupt elements. Absolute loyalty, absolute purity and absolute reliability are the political demands of the party for the military,” the commentary said.

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Xi has made weeding out corruption in the military a top goal. It also comes as Xi steps up efforts to modernise forces that are projecting power across the disputed waters of the East and South China Seas, though it has not fought a war in decades.

The party has struggled to contain public anger at a seemingly endless stream of corruption scandals, particularly when officials are seen as abusing their posts to amass wealth.

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