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Chinese Communist Party issues code of ethics to ensure clean governance

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Chinese Communist Party issues code of ethics to ensure clean governance
English.news.cn 2010-02-23 18:19:23 FeedbackPrintRSS

BEIJING, Feb. 23 (Xinhua) -- The Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee issued a code of ethics for CPC cadres to follow Tuesday to ensure clean practice in their work and prevent corruption.

The guidelines specify 52 unacceptable practices with respect to CPC leaders and cadres of various levels, including accepting cash or financial instruments as gifts, and using their influence to benefit their spouses, children or "special concerned persons" with regards to their employment, stock trading or business.

He Guoqiang, member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, said Party leaders should strictly abide by the code.

He, also head of the CPC Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, stressed Party leaders' practices such as using their power for illicit gains, accepting money or gifts under different names, using or turning public funds or properties into their own, should end.

Party leaders were not allowed to engage in for-profit activities, such as establishing enterprises, registering companies outside the Chinese mainland, owning stocks or bonds of non-listed companies, or taking part-time jobs in enterprises or social organizations, He said.

Party leaders should use their energies to serve the society and the people, and were strictly prohibited from meddling in economic activities against relevant regulations with respect to construction projects, land transfer, government purchases, real estate development and operation, mineral resources exploration and utilization, intermediary services and enterprise restructuring, according to the official.

Party officials were not allowed to use their influence to seek benefits for their relatives and should be fair and just in the selection and promotion of other Party leaders, he said.

CPC officials were prohibited from involvement in for-profit activities and using public funds for personal interests, according to the guidelines.

Officials should not seek personal profits or engage in insider trading, according to the code.

They are banned from spending inappropriately large amounts of government funds on the purchase of vehicles, office receptions, construction of office buildings, high-cost recreational activities, as well as overseas tours, it reads.

They are also banned from abusing their power to promote persons in a way that is against relevant regulations, according to the code.

"As an important intra-Party regulation, the code is significant for ensuring clean governance among CPC officials ... and advancing the fight against corruption and building a clean government," the CPC Central Committee stated in a circular.

The CPC Central Committee urged officials to earnestly follow the guidelines and warned those who violated the regulations would be "severely" disciplined.

According to the code, cadres who violated the rules would be disciplined and could also be charged with violating criminal laws.

The CPC introduced an ethics code for CPC cadres on a trial basis in March 1997.

"As the Party's fight against corruption was being intensified in the new era," the committee revised the 1997 version and released Tuesday's code, the central committee said in the circular.

The central committee urged CPC committees at various levels to enhance supervision and said education on eradicating corruption and upholding integrity should be incorporated into CPC officials' training agenda.

Plan to monitor overseas trips by officials

* Source: Global Times
* [01:56 February 24 2010]
* Comments

By An Baijie

In an effort to prevent corrupt officials from absconding abroad with stolen public money, the Ministry of Supervision (MOS) wants to set up a system to monitor "naked officials," referring to those whose spouses and children live overseas.

At a meeting between 10 ministries including the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Commerce, and the National Audit Office, the MOS said the problem is one of its key goals this year, according to a report published on the website of the National Bureau of Corruption of Prevention.

No details were given in the official report, which only said the supervision departments were going to study concrete measures to regulate "naked officials."

In November 2009, the Shenzhen government issued a regulation, stipulating that "naked officials" whose spouses and children have all migrated abroad or got the "green card" (permanent residence) in foreign countries, would never be elected as the head of the local Party committee, according to Guangzhou-based Nanfang Daily.

The MOS also vowed to monitor expenses related to overseas travel, slash the budget for overseas trips, and curb sightseeing trips.

Yang Xianghong, Party secretary of Lucheng district in Zhejiang Province, left his official tour group in Paris in 2009 and went to live with his daughter who lives in France.

The Party's disciplinary committee has been looking into the problem since Yang's case.

In total, there were 33,507 official groups (1.2 million officials) went on official trips abroad in 2009, nearly a 50 percent drop from the previ-ous three years that resulted in savings of more than 1.6 billion yuan ($234 million) compared with previous years, said the MOS report.

The country's supervision departments had been regulating the officials' publicly funded outbound trips for years, but local officials routinely find excuses to travel overseas, said the China Youth Daily.
 
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