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China admitted its corruption problem was still very serious and pledged to work harder to curb graft.
A government report from the State Council said prosecutors investigated more than 240,000 embezzlement, bribery and other cases involving official corruption from 2003 to 2009. In the past five years, more than 69,200 cases of commercial bribery involving some 16.59 billion yuan were investigated, the report said. The Communist Party leadership said Chinas harmony and stability depended on efforts to build a clean government.
So far, Chinas effort to combat corruption has yielded notable results, the report said. But it warned that corruption persists, with some cases even involving huge sums of money. The situation in combating corruption is still very serious, and the tasks are still abundant.
Wu Yuliang, member of the Communist Partys central disciplinary committee, told a press conference on the report that more curbs on extravagant expenses such as official travel, purchasing cars and banquets would be implemented. He said the focus of government and party anti-corruption efforts would be institutional building, meaning efforts to structure the political system in a way that prevents corruption.
The cause of corruption is complicated, Wu said, according to an AFP report. Institutional building is a systematic process that will take time (but) the party and government is fully capable of curbing corruption to the lowest level.
Official corruption is not the only problem the government is fighting; a crackdown on graft in business has been happening as well. Recent scandals include the 14-year bribery sentence for Huang Guangyu, who founded GOME Electrionics and was formerly the countrys richest man, and the employees of Australias Rio Tinto PLC who received 10-year sentences.
China has handed out death sentences on numerous occasions for bribery and graft, including one on an anti-corruption official who was convicted of taking bribes.
The report directed notable praise in helping fight corruption at the Chinese media, which it says is encouraged to expose unhealthy tendencies of all kinds and violations of law and discipline by Party and government organs as well as their functionaries. It said China highly values the positive role played by the Internet.
China, however, has come under mounting criticism from the U.S. for censoring access to the Internet, and the country ranks eighth-to-last in the Reporters Without Borders 2010 press freedom index. Chinese journalist Sun Hongjie, who wrote about politically sensitive issues in the country, died Tuesday, days after being beaten by a gang of men at a construction site. Police said it was the result of a personal squabble but many of his colleagues and outside groups doubt the official account.
China Says Corruption ‘Still Very Serious’ Problem - Corruption Currents - WSJ
A government report from the State Council said prosecutors investigated more than 240,000 embezzlement, bribery and other cases involving official corruption from 2003 to 2009. In the past five years, more than 69,200 cases of commercial bribery involving some 16.59 billion yuan were investigated, the report said. The Communist Party leadership said Chinas harmony and stability depended on efforts to build a clean government.
So far, Chinas effort to combat corruption has yielded notable results, the report said. But it warned that corruption persists, with some cases even involving huge sums of money. The situation in combating corruption is still very serious, and the tasks are still abundant.
Wu Yuliang, member of the Communist Partys central disciplinary committee, told a press conference on the report that more curbs on extravagant expenses such as official travel, purchasing cars and banquets would be implemented. He said the focus of government and party anti-corruption efforts would be institutional building, meaning efforts to structure the political system in a way that prevents corruption.
The cause of corruption is complicated, Wu said, according to an AFP report. Institutional building is a systematic process that will take time (but) the party and government is fully capable of curbing corruption to the lowest level.
Official corruption is not the only problem the government is fighting; a crackdown on graft in business has been happening as well. Recent scandals include the 14-year bribery sentence for Huang Guangyu, who founded GOME Electrionics and was formerly the countrys richest man, and the employees of Australias Rio Tinto PLC who received 10-year sentences.
China has handed out death sentences on numerous occasions for bribery and graft, including one on an anti-corruption official who was convicted of taking bribes.
The report directed notable praise in helping fight corruption at the Chinese media, which it says is encouraged to expose unhealthy tendencies of all kinds and violations of law and discipline by Party and government organs as well as their functionaries. It said China highly values the positive role played by the Internet.
China, however, has come under mounting criticism from the U.S. for censoring access to the Internet, and the country ranks eighth-to-last in the Reporters Without Borders 2010 press freedom index. Chinese journalist Sun Hongjie, who wrote about politically sensitive issues in the country, died Tuesday, days after being beaten by a gang of men at a construction site. Police said it was the result of a personal squabble but many of his colleagues and outside groups doubt the official account.
China Says Corruption ‘Still Very Serious’ Problem - Corruption Currents - WSJ