Want China Times, Xinhua 2014-11-16
Companies and public service groups supervised by the Communist Party of China (CPC) and government departments will face a new round of top-level disciplinary inspections amid China's anti-corruption drive.
| An anti-graft advert at the bus station in Beijing, Jan. 15. (File photo/CNS) |
Companies and public service groups supervised by the Communist Party of China (CPC) and government departments will face a new round of top-level disciplinary inspections amid China's anti-corruption drive.
"Over
the past two years, central inspection teams have covered Party and government
departments at the provincial level. Next, we will focus on organizations
supervised by central authorities," Wang Ying, a senior official with the
central inspection team, said Friday in an online interview.
Anti-graft
measures set by the CPC and disciplinary inspections by superior authorities
have played a great role in uncovering and correcting misconducts since the new
leadership was inaugurated in 2012.
Wang
refused to disclose the time and duration of the upcoming inspections, but said
certain Party and government departments would be rechecked.
In addition
to local Party and government units, the previous four rounds of central
inspections also covered seven public service institutes, six state-owned
enterprises and two universities.
Central
inspections were responsible for the downfall of corrupt officials, including
Su Rong, former vice chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference National Committee, the country's top political advisory body.
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