What's new

China’s Communist Party warns cadres it’s on the corruption warpath

beijingwalker

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 4, 2011
Messages
65,195
Reaction score
-55
Country
China
Location
China
China’s Communist Party warns cadres it’s on the corruption warpath
  • Anti-graft watchdog highlights stiff penalties for recent extreme cases of bribery
  • Among the examples is the death sentence given to Lai Xiaomin, the former head of China Huarong Asset Management


William Zheng
Published: 9:00am, 20 Jan, 2021

6a46e464-5a5a-11eb-a99a-beae699a1a1d_image_hires_221432.jpeg

The case of Lai Xiaomin, former chairman of China Huarong Asset Management, has been highlighted by the Communist Party’s anti-corruption agency as a warning to cadres. Photo: Weibo


China’s top anti-graft watchdog is on a publicity blitz, using a number of high-profile cases to warn cadres not to test the leadership’s resolve on corruption.The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the Communist Party’stop anti-corruption agency, is scheduled to hold its three-day annual conference from Friday and is expected to use the cases to underscore the leadership’s determination to end corruption.

As part of that campaign, state broadcaster CCTV will also air a four-part TV programme from Thursday documenting 16 cases of “how [we have] enforced discipline and curb corruption ... as [we] build China into a modestly prosperous society”, the CCDI said on its website on Tuesday.

The announcement came a day after the CCDI published a long report of the crimes committed by Lai Xiaomin, former chairman of China Huarong Asset Management, one of the country’s four state-asset managers, who was
sentenced to deathearly this month for taking 1.79 billion yuan (US$270 million) in bribes.

The report – “Using Lai Xiaomin’s case to encourage rectification” – said the commission ordered party bodies of 19 financial institutions to organise “study sessions” with more than 130 senior and middle-ranking managers to “self reflect” by learning from Lai’s case.

It also said that almost 100 Huarong officials were investigated in connection with Lai’s case and 54 who had earned promotion under his reign had since been removed.

The commission also sent inspectors to the three other state-owned asset management companies – China Orient Asset Management, China Cinda Asset Management and China Great Wall Asset Management. In the aftermath, the four asset managers closed 56 non-core businesses.

Also in the cross hairs is Qin Guangrong, former party secretary of the southwestern province of Yunnan. Qin was sentenced on Tuesday to seven years in jail for taking more than 23 million yuan in bribes.

A TV programme broadcast by the anti-graft agency of Yunnan province last week portrayed Qin as a superstitious person who believed that feng shui would bring him good fortune and promotion to a state leader.

Qin stepped down in 2014 and became a deputy chairman of the national legislature’s legal affairs committee. He surrendered in 2019 after his son Qin Ling was investigated in another corruption case.


Liu Changsong, director of Beijing Mugong Law Firm, said Lai’s death sentence was Beijing’s clear warning to officials in key positions, especially those in the financial industry.

“Just imagine, how will the average person, who works day and night to make ends meet, feels when they know Lai Xiaomin gets 1.8 billion yuan by trading power for money,” Liu said.
“People are, of course, angry. If this is allowed, who would be motivated to work honestly?

“China’s top leadership certainly don’t want those in the most lucrative positions to think that they can get away with serious corruption without facing corresponding consequences.”
Liu said the stiff penalty for Lai also indicated that the party leadership was determined to root out the rampant corruption in China’s opaque financial sector, which was the “economic lifeblood of China’s stability”.

“Those who give bribes are not stupid because they only bribe those who are in power and expect good returns,” he said.
“Corrupt officials like Lai are the main reason for instability in China’s financial industry and the death sentence on Lai can be seen as a sign that [the top leaders] want to clean up the industry and restore order.”

 
. .
China’s Communist Party warns cadres it’s on the corruption warpath
  • Anti-graft watchdog highlights stiff penalties for recent extreme cases of bribery
  • Among the examples is the death sentence given to Lai Xiaomin, the former head of China Huarong Asset Management


William Zheng
Published: 9:00am, 20 Jan, 2021

6a46e464-5a5a-11eb-a99a-beae699a1a1d_image_hires_221432.jpeg

The case of Lai Xiaomin, former chairman of China Huarong Asset Management, has been highlighted by the Communist Party’s anti-corruption agency as a warning to cadres. Photo: Weibo


China’s top anti-graft watchdog is on a publicity blitz, using a number of high-profile cases to warn cadres not to test the leadership’s resolve on corruption.The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the Communist Party’stop anti-corruption agency, is scheduled to hold its three-day annual conference from Friday and is expected to use the cases to underscore the leadership’s determination to end corruption.

As part of that campaign, state broadcaster CCTV will also air a four-part TV programme from Thursday documenting 16 cases of “how [we have] enforced discipline and curb corruption ... as [we] build China into a modestly prosperous society”, the CCDI said on its website on Tuesday.

The announcement came a day after the CCDI published a long report of the crimes committed by Lai Xiaomin, former chairman of China Huarong Asset Management, one of the country’s four state-asset managers, who was
sentenced to deathearly this month for taking 1.79 billion yuan (US$270 million) in bribes.

The report – “Using Lai Xiaomin’s case to encourage rectification” – said the commission ordered party bodies of 19 financial institutions to organise “study sessions” with more than 130 senior and middle-ranking managers to “self reflect” by learning from Lai’s case.

It also said that almost 100 Huarong officials were investigated in connection with Lai’s case and 54 who had earned promotion under his reign had since been removed.

The commission also sent inspectors to the three other state-owned asset management companies – China Orient Asset Management, China Cinda Asset Management and China Great Wall Asset Management. In the aftermath, the four asset managers closed 56 non-core businesses.

Also in the cross hairs is Qin Guangrong, former party secretary of the southwestern province of Yunnan. Qin was sentenced on Tuesday to seven years in jail for taking more than 23 million yuan in bribes.

A TV programme broadcast by the anti-graft agency of Yunnan province last week portrayed Qin as a superstitious person who believed that feng shui would bring him good fortune and promotion to a state leader.

Qin stepped down in 2014 and became a deputy chairman of the national legislature’s legal affairs committee. He surrendered in 2019 after his son Qin Ling was investigated in another corruption case.


Liu Changsong, director of Beijing Mugong Law Firm, said Lai’s death sentence was Beijing’s clear warning to officials in key positions, especially those in the financial industry.

“Just imagine, how will the average person, who works day and night to make ends meet, feels when they know Lai Xiaomin gets 1.8 billion yuan by trading power for money,” Liu said.
“People are, of course, angry. If this is allowed, who would be motivated to work honestly?

“China’s top leadership certainly don’t want those in the most lucrative positions to think that they can get away with serious corruption without facing corresponding consequences.”
Liu said the stiff penalty for Lai also indicated that the party leadership was determined to root out the rampant corruption in China’s opaque financial sector, which was the “economic lifeblood of China’s stability”.

“Those who give bribes are not stupid because they only bribe those who are in power and expect good returns,” he said.
“Corrupt officials like Lai are the main reason for instability in China’s financial industry and the death sentence on Lai can be seen as a sign that [the top leaders] want to clean up the industry and restore order.”


Who'll catch all the corruption done by Xi and his friends? :D
 
. .
If only we can implement the same in pakistan instead of letting criminals go abroad, pakistan would be much better

If you think Pakistani are corrupt......oh boy....wait till you see Chinese corruption.

It's in all layers of society and is so expansive that even after so called "Crackdowns on Corruption" by Xi. Xi still has to yell at his party members to not do corruption while he and his family fill their pockets. :lol:

Anyone in China can do corruption as long as they're toeing the party line. If you aren't....then you'll be caught and jailed.....like Jack Ma, who incidentally didn't do any corruption but he did talk against the CCP...

I guess, Trump?

Trumps out of the office. Xi is in office for life.....or until the next revolution. :D
 
. . .
If you think Pakistani are corrupt......oh boy....wait till you see Chinese corruption
I am aware of the fact however China does take corruption very seriously and unlike us, throws them into the gallows and not allow them to escape under one pretext or the other and allow to be used by anti state elements as and when pleases.
 
.
Corruption in China has taken a different route in recent years. In the old days, you pay a bribe directly or officials will embezzle funds. Now it's more about providing benefits to family members of officials, rather than direct exchange of money/gift.

To effectively fight corruption, I think China needs to establish an external agency not directly controlled by CCP. It should be a similar apolitical agency like ICAC in Hong Kong, answerable only to the National Assembly rather than Xi himself.
 
.
Corruption in China has taken a different route in recent years. In the old days, you pay a bribe directly or officials will embezzle funds. Now it's more about providing benefits to family members of officials, rather than direct exchange of money/gift.

To effectively fight corruption, I think China needs to establish an external agency not directly controlled by CCP. It should be a similar apolitical agency like ICAC in Hong Kong, answerable only to the National Assembly rather than Xi himself.

Well, someone's said it...

And no, that won't happen, ever. CCP is in absolute control. Meaning that it won't ever let anyone, Jack Ma for example, stand up and oversea them. Since CCP is top dog, whoever is at the top inside CCP (Xi, his friends and family) will have free reign to do whatever.

No system is corrupt free. Democratic or a Dictatorship. But in a democracy, things are always exposed. No matter who gets exposed, big or small. The President or the citizens. :D
 
.
One thing I like about China is that capital will never supersede the state no matter how big that capital becomes, capital will never be able to block reforms, buy off politicians or government officials, instigate nation wide corruption that capital will never be above the law and if it ever tries too it will be cut down to pieces, I guess that's the reason why China's economy has been so successful in the past couple of decades compared to some other "Capitalist" countries.
 
.
Well, someone's said it...

And no, that won't happen, ever. CCP is in absolute control. Meaning that it won't ever let anyone, Jack Ma for example, stand up and oversea them. Since CCP is top dog, whoever is at the top inside CCP (Xi, his friends and family) will have free reign to do whatever.

No system is corrupt free. Democratic or a Dictatorship. But in a democracy, things are always exposed. No matter who gets exposed, big or small. The President or the citizens. :D
Jack Ma is the head of a monopoly trying to expand his business empire. He doesn't have public good in mind other than increasing his profits. Trusting big business to do the right thing is like asking the fox to guard the chicken. Corporations should not have control over the government.

Heh for thinking democracy will always expose corruption. If that's the case, half the politicians in India and Pakistan would have been in jail already.
 
.
One thing I like about China is that capital will never supersede the state no matter how big that capital becomes, capital will never be able to block reforms, buy off politicians, instigate nation wide corruption that capital will never be above the law and if it ever tries too it will be cut down to pieces, I guess that's the reason why China's economy has been so successful in the past couple of decades compared to some other "Capitalist" countries.

Lmao. You think China is today because of China??

If it hadn't opened up it's markets to the West. It wouldn't be at this stage. The whole world used China as a sweatshop. You can stop acting like the Chinese worked day and night to make China what it is today.

Most of the $$$ came from outside as a form of investment. The rest was just regular Chinese IP theft and 10-30% hard work.
Jack Ma is the head of a monopoly trying to expand his business empire. He doesn't have public good in mind other than increasing his profits. Trusting big business to do the right thing is like asking the fox to guard the chicken. Corporations should not have control over the government.

Heh for thinking democracy will always expose corruption. If that's the case, half the politicians in India and Pakistan would have been in jail already.

Without Jack Ma....there would be no AliBaba & other companies. I see no mainlander making a company comparable to AliBaba. You guys are so ungrateful. Always toeing the CCP line. Even when living in Canada. :lol:
 
.
Lmao. You think China is today because of China??

If it hadn't opened up it's markets to the West. It wouldn't be at this stage. The whole world used China as a sweatshop. You can stop acting like the Chinese worked day and night to make China what it is today.

Most of the $$$ came from outside as a form of investment. The rest was just regular Chinese IP theft and 10-30% hard work.


Without Jack Ma....there would be no AliBaba & other companies. I see no mainlander making a company comparable to AliBaba. You guys are so ungrateful. Always toeing the CCP line. Even when living in Canada. :lol:
How come so many other countries which opened up to the west long before China still live in poverty? look no further.
 
.
Heh for thinking democracy will always expose corruption. If that's the case, half the politicians in India and Pakistan would have been in jail already.

Neither is a democracy.....who's the idiot now? :lol:

How come so many other countries which opened up to the west long before China still live in poverty? look no further.

All of them. Just like China. No country can ever eliminate poverty....there will always be poor. :rolleyes:
 
.
Back
Top Bottom