Want China Times, Xinhua 2014-02-22
| Ji Wenlin attending the second plenum of the Fifth National People's Congress of Hainan province, Feb. 9. (Photo/Xinhua) |
The
Communist Party of China (CPC) has picked up its fight against corruption after
a Lunar New Year lull by announcing probes of another two
vice-ministerial-level officials.
On Tuesday
evening and Wednesday morning, the Central Commission for Discipline and
Inspection (CCDI), the CPC's anti-graft body, publicized on its website that Ji
Wenlin, vice governor of south China's Hainan province, and Zhu Zuoli, senior
political advisor of northwestern China's Shaanxi province, were under
investigation for "serious violations of discipline and laws."
The two
officials were removed from their posts on Thursday.
The news
picks up from the CPC's tough measures against corruption at the end of last
year, when barely a week passed without news of high-level officials being
probed. In December alone, investigations were opened into five ministerial and
provincial-level officials.
Li Chongxi,
chairman of southwestern China's Sichuan Provincial Committee of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference, was last among a series of
"tigers" being investigated last year. He was removed from his post
for suspected violations of discipline and laws.
Ji and Zhu
put the number of high-level officials being probed at 20 since the 18th CPC
National Congress witnessed a power transition among the CPC Central Committee.
"It's
some sort of extension of last year's anti-graft efforts," said Dai
Yanjun, a professor with the Party School of the CPC Central Committee. The
fact that more than a month passed without any senior officials being brought
down does not mean a suspension of the campaign, Dai added.
The lull
may simply have been because authorities chose to hold off from announcing the
news until after the Lunar New Year holiday, according to the professor.
Anti-graft
work has been strengthened comprehensively since the congress, and it has been
endorsed by the public. It has been impossible to overlook last year's
introduction of a number of key rules and regulations, including measures to
curb extravagance during festivals, a five-year (2013-2017) plan on building a system
to punish and prevent corruption, and the declaration that the efforts will
target "tigers" as well as "flies," referring to both
high-ranking and grassroots officials.
Dai said
the continuation of anti-graft work has also been reflected in further
investigation of graft cases. People can see the links between the officials
condemned last year and those being brought into the spotlight now. Ji, for
instance, held a post in the CPC Sichuan Provincial Committee once chaired by
Li Chongxi.
"Undoubtedly,
more corrupt officials will be exposed as long as the anti-graft authorities
continue to investigate these networks," said Dai.
Professor
Xie Chuntao with the Party School of the CPC Central Committee agreed that Ji
and Zhu's downfall is not "a reboot of the CPC's anti-graft
measures."
It is very
likely that the authorities pinned down their wrongdoing before the holiday,
said Xie, adding that the CPC's anti-graft plans were laid out at the third
plenary session of the CCDI in January.
According
to a communique issued after the session, the party will carry on its
anti-graft battle this year through reforming the supervision system and
toughening punishment.
It will
also sharpen the efficiency of CCDI inspections of provincial governments,
state-owned enterprises and public institutions to discover malpractice and
harmful work styles.
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