China steps up anti-graft efforts in past 30 years
Written by Writer on Friday, October 10th, 2008
China steps up anti-graft efforts in past 30 years
BEIJING (Xinhua) — China has beefed up the anti-corruption and discipline work since the country adopted the reform and opening-up policy 30 years ago, official sources said.
To ensure major policies of the central government to be faithfully implemented at various levels, the Ministry of Supervision (MOS), working with other relevant departments, has severely cracked down on defiant activities.
In October 2006, for example, the MOS and the Ministry of Land and Resources launched a campaign to overhaul cases involving the illegal use of land nationwide. As of June this year when it was concluded, 3,733 officials were punished, of whom 2,393 were prosecuted.
Government officials and heads of state-owned enterprises were punished for abuse of power or dereliction of duty. A campaign cracking down on these people buying shares in coal mines launched since August 2005 has punished 148 involving 709 million yuan (103million U.S. dollars).
To further curb corruption, the departments of supervision and land and resources have introduced public bidding mechanism for land use and mining rights since 2004.
China now has 3,224 supervision and discipline departments at various levels with 360,000 staff.
In last September, the National Bureau of Corruption Prevention was set up, which helped further beef up the country’s anti-graft efforts.
News Topics Related Posts :
- Cabinet may discuss higher pay for judges today (Thursday, November 20, 2008)
- PosLaju Surcharge Reduced To 23 Percent Effective Tomorrow (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- HK government’s market action takes effect (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- China’s centrally-administered SOEs urged to reinforce risk management (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- Chinese shares climb 3.68% as investors’ confidence rallies amid stimulus measures (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- China outlines first multi-year grain security plan (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- Tibet airport sees first night flight after 43 years (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- Chinese gov’t pledges to provide policy umbrella for disabled (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- China urges promoting equality among different religions, cultures (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- Lao party chief meets senior CPC official on strengthening ties (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- Chinese and DPRK diplomats meet over six-party nuclear talks (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- Taiwan court upholds 7-year jail term on former Taiwan leader’s son-in-law (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- China mulls punishing lip-synching in commercial performances (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- Sanlu liquid milk back on Chinese market after melamine scandal (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- Police shoot dead motorcycle theft suspect in south China (Friday, November 14, 2008)
- China outlines first multi-year grain security plan (Thursday, November 13, 2008)
- China’s bailout expected to benefit San Francisco businesses (Thursday, November 13, 2008)
- Hong Kong stocks close lower on Wall Street fall (Thursday, November 13, 2008)
- Chinese shares up 0.8% as brokerage issues gain (Thursday, November 13, 2008)
- China’s actual use of overseas capital up 35% in past 10 months (Thursday, November 13, 2008)
News Topics : Abuse Of Power, Beijing China, Bidding Mechanism, Buying Shares, Central Government, China Steps, Coal Mines, Corruption, Cracking, Dereliction Of Duty, Discipline Work, Government Officials, Last September, People, Prevention, Public Bidding, Relevant Departments, State Owned Enterprises, Supervision, Xinhua, Yuan
This entry was posted
on Friday, October 10th, 2008 and is filed under
China News.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the
RSS 2.0 feed.
You can
leave a response, or
trackback from your own site.