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Ningxia Hui autonomous region in northwestern China, which has a large Muslim population, has banned all of its police officers from drinking alcohol under any circumstances, on or off duty, according to a local government notice.
The “Ningxia public security organs alcohol prohibition order”, issued a few days ago, was published on the official Weibo accounts of several police stations across Ningxia.
The notice said that any member of the policecaught drinking alcohol, whether they were an officer or an auxiliary police worker, would be “investigated and strictly dealt with according to regulations”.
“This prohibition order not only bans us from drinking alcohol over the Lunar New Year period, but has no definite end date. Now it looks like it will be in place long-term,” an anonymous auxiliary police officerin Ningxia told Shanghai-based news outlet Thepaper.cn on Wednesday
Another officer, from Ningxia traffic police, confirmed to Thepaper.cn that he had received the notice on February 3.
Those tightened guidelines had targeted the traditional culture of boozy office banquets in state firms, as part of President Xi Jinping’s high-profile anti-corruption drive. Expensive drinks such as Mao-tai were commonly presented as gifts or served at official gatherings, which tarnished the image of Chinese government workers, claimed state media.
This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: No drinking at any time for police in Ningxia
The “Ningxia public security organs alcohol prohibition order”, issued a few days ago, was published on the official Weibo accounts of several police stations across Ningxia.
The notice said that any member of the policecaught drinking alcohol, whether they were an officer or an auxiliary police worker, would be “investigated and strictly dealt with according to regulations”.
“This prohibition order not only bans us from drinking alcohol over the Lunar New Year period, but has no definite end date. Now it looks like it will be in place long-term,” an anonymous auxiliary police officerin Ningxia told Shanghai-based news outlet Thepaper.cn on Wednesday
Another officer, from Ningxia traffic police, confirmed to Thepaper.cn that he had received the notice on February 3.
Those tightened guidelines had targeted the traditional culture of boozy office banquets in state firms, as part of President Xi Jinping’s high-profile anti-corruption drive. Expensive drinks such as Mao-tai were commonly presented as gifts or served at official gatherings, which tarnished the image of Chinese government workers, claimed state media.
This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: No drinking at any time for police in Ningxia