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To No End: Why China’s Corruption Crackdown Won’t Be Stopping Soon

Just let the history draw itself.
Politician in Xi's level, we cannot have any idea about what he thinking or going to do for now.
My meaningless words, but if a party or organization as big as CPC (85.12 million members) and a country as big as China,
Singapore is a successful country and Singapore's experience is valuable, but maybe only for several cites in China, even Shanghai is bigger than whole Singapore. (4 times in population, 9 times in territory)
More people, more thoughts, more troubles.
Depends on the size, nothing is same.
 
Holy moly , Guacamole ! This culture of bribery really needs to be tackled...! o_O

Move over, Texas. Population, rail systems, corruption, "mass events," or GDP... everything is bigger in China.

Perhaps we should retire "Big in Japan" as a phrase as well.
 
Lawmakers call for stricter driving laws

Lawmakers on Friday called for the Criminal Law to include stricter driving rules, in light of drug-influenced accidents and "blind driving" (driving while using cell phones).

Drugs seriously affect coordination and driving while under the influence can be even more dangerous than drink driving, lawmaker Du Liming from southwestern Chongqing Municipality told a group discussion at the National People's Congress Standing Committee' bimonthly session, which began on Monday and will run through Saturday.

A tour-bus driver took crystal methamphetamine before driving and caused a severe traffic accident on a highway in east China's Jiangsu Province, killing 14 and injuring 20 in April 2012.

While the top legislature deliberated a draft amendment to the Criminal Law, Du suggested a stipulation that those caught driving while on drugs should be detained and fined. If other crimes were committed while under the influence of drugs, criminals should face heavier punishment, he went on.

The draft already includes drink driving, speeding and transportation of dangerous chemicals.

Lawmaker Jiang Wanqiu suggested that blind driving be added, citing another Jiangsu bus driver who while using his cell phone while driving, caused a fatal traffic accident.
 
I doubt about the performance of the govt allow rising of hundreds thousand official like below:

Chinese official’s alleged $33 million bribe stash rivals Eiffel Tower

AP
  • Nov 1, 2014
BEIJING – Investigators in China have found more than 200 million yuan ($33 million) in cash at the home of an energy official accused of bribe-taking, in the country’s largest cash seizure ever, a senior prosecutor said Friday.

If all that money was in 100 yuan notes, China’s largest cash denomination, it would pile 230 meters (750 feet) high — more than two-thirds the height of the Eiffel Tower.

Xu Jinhui, a top anti-graft prosecutor, told reporters the cash was seized at the home of Wei Pengyuan, deputy chief of the coal bureau under the National Energy Administration. Wei is under investigation for alleged corruption.

Investigators wore out four of the 16 cash-counting machines brought in to measure the stash, financial news publication Ciaxin reported.

The amount was impressive even in the context of the enormous amounts of cash Chinese investigators routinely seize from officials suspected of corruption.

Bribe-takers have been inclined to stash cash in safety boxes, toilets, inside pillows, at the bottom of rice containers and in rented apartments to avoid leaving any records of the ill-gotten money.

This is how they run away, their money and new life would be aboard.

Retired NDRC Pricing Official 'Detained at Beijing Airport'
Inquiry into Cao Changqing may be linked to a graft investigation going on at National Energy Administration
By staff reporters Wang Xiaobing and Yu Ning
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(Beijing) – A former senior official in charge of utility pricing at China's top economic planner was detained shortly after retiring at the capital's international airport, sources close to the matter said.

Cao Changqing, former director of the pricing department of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), was detained around August 24 at Beijing Capital International Airport, sources said. Cao retired in May. It was unclear who detained him.

Calls to Cao's mobile phone were not answered.

He took over as head of the NDRC's pricing department in 2007. It supervises and approves prices for electricity, water and other public utilities and services.

"The department is one of the most powerful in the NDRC," a source in the electricity industry said.

The investigation into Cao is likely linked to a graft probe going on at the National Energy Administration, another source close to the matter said.

Five senior officials at the NEA have come under investigation since April. They are Liang Bo, vice director of its electricity department; Xu Yongsheng, a vice director; Hao Weiping, director of the nuclear power department; Wei Pengyuan, vice director of the coal department; and Wang Jun, director of the renewable energy department.

The country's electricity prices have long been under government control. The NDRC approves electricity prices for households, commerce and industrial use. Many experts have criticized the pricing department for hindering reform of electricity prices.
 
That's just a small part of the iceberg. The remain aboard, as they planned carefully.
 
That's rather interesting. Would the US other countries now cooperate now that they now have a chance to keep 80% of the stolen assets of the Chinese people?

China to share up to 80% of assets in global corruption manhunt: expert
By Chen Heying

China will offer up to 80 percent of forfeited assets with the countries that help China recover wealth illegally transferred overseas, a mechanism to help China's efforts worldwide to hunt alleged corrupt officials, a top international criminal law expert said on Sunday.

According to the international practice dealing with the return of stolen assets to lawful owners, the confiscated assets will be shared with the country that suspects transfer their assets to or flee to. The proportion depends on its assistance to the recovery, Huang Feng, head of the Institute for International Criminal Law at Beijing Normal University, told the Global Times.

The sharing mechanism, which has been used by China when it launched its "Fox Hunt 2014" manhunt in July, can encourage other countries to help China to recover illicit money, as it becomes a gateway to settle economic disputes over the ownership of the assets and to compensate the foreign countries for their material and personnel costs, he said.

Through the international manhunt "Fox Hunt 2014," Chinese police have arrested over 80 suspects in 40 countries and regions allegedly involved in economic crimes, the Ministry of Public Security said Thursday.

Huang said that if US authorities provide "essential assistance," China will share 50 to 80 percent of the forfeited assets with the country, while the US will share 40 to 50 percent of the assets if it provides "substantial assistance" and "facilitating assistance" for less than 40 percent. Canada became the first country to sign an agreement with China to share forfeited assets that Chinese fugitives illegally transferred to Canada, news outlet cri.cn reported in July 2013. Canada requires a formal asset-sharing agreement before engaging in asset recovery efforts.

However, such assistance provided to Chinese police accounts for only a small portion of such cases, Huang noted.

Huang said that it is hard for Chinese police officers to provide evidence of suspects' illegal assets since many of them had been laundered in other countries.
 

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Majority want death penalty for corruption: survey

调查显示73.2%受访者主张对贪污贿赂罪保留死刑


(ECNS) – More than 70 percent of people interviewed in a recent survey want to keep the death penalty for crimes of corruption and bribery.

The survey, launched by the Beijing Youth Daily last week, asked 2,105 people for their opinions on revisions of punishment for corruption included in the draft of the ninth amendment to the Criminal Law.

Of all those surveyed, 83.1 percent said they hoped the amendment would get passed to aid China's fight against corruption.

The survey shows that increasing the severity of punishment for corrupt officials and also punishing their relatives concerned the public most.

Che Hao, associate professor at Peking University Law School, said the highlights of the revision include punishment of those who give bribes as well as the relatives and beneficiaries of corrupt officials.

When it comes to the controversial capital punishment, 73.2 percent of those surveyed said they wanted to keep it.

Che said scrapping the death penalty has been a trend globally. The ninth amendment plans to remove the death penalty for nine crimes, most of them economic ones.

"But the death penalty for corrupt officials isn't just an economic problem, but a political one," Che said. He added that given the current situation in China, keeping the death penalty may be a better choice.


China uses APEC in corruption fight

Fighting corruption is a high priority during this year’s APEC meetings. The APEC members are building up a network to prevent the flight of both illegal funds and criminals.

China and Australia have recently joined hands in fighting corruption. Police from both sides are taking action, seizing the assets of corrupt, fugitive Chinese officials in that country.

The move is part of China’s international campaign, code named “Operation Fox Hunt,” initiated by the Ministry of Public Security. The ultimate objective is to bring back all fugitive officials to face justice.

“Both countries are signatory states of the UN Anti-corruption Convention. They have obligations on law enforcement. Although they have no extradition treaty, they can still cooperate within the framework of a higher international law,” said Cheng Wenhao, a professor at Tsinghua University.

Fleeing abroad and transferring assets overseas has been the decades-old game plan of corrupt officials, with the top destinations being Australia, the US, and Canada. Historically, those countries have offered easy residency, were easy to transfer money to, and were beyond the reach of Chinese law.

To keep up the chase, China is pushing to upgrade the APEC Network of Anti-Corruption Authorities and Law Enforcement Agencies, known as ACT-NET. Sharing information and resources is key.
 
China’s Anti-Corruption Fight Exposes Lack of Official “Courage,” Critics Say - China Real Time Report - WSJ

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  • November 5, 2014, 3:02 PM HKT
China’s Anti-Corruption Fight Exposes Lack of Official “Courage,” Critics Say
By Russell Leigh Moses

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A Chinese street vendor holds up souvenirs adorned with pictures of Chinese leader Xi Jinping and his predecessors in Tiananmen Square of Beijing.
European Pressphoto Agency
Chinese President Xi Jinping’s on-going crusade to clean up the Communist Party appears to be expanding, and unearthing new instances of graft. This past weekend, anti-corruption czar Wang Qishan vowed to use new methods to continue the campaign against cadres who, he says, “seem to have forgotten that they are party members, didn’t learn discipline, are apt to ignore regulations and act shamelessly.”

But according to commentaries in the state-controlled media, Xi’s ongoing and apparently escalating crusade to punish corruption is exposing something else that all too many Chinese officials seem to be lacking: the commitment—the “courage” as some critiques have put itto do the right sort of work.

That lack of nerve is described as a persistent problem in Sichuan, a province where anti-corruption inspectors have discovered a multitude of malfeasance and a power base of ex-security chief Zhou Yongkang, who’s also under investigation. It’s likely not the only place where graft has been thriving.

According to one lengthy account of the corruption raging in Sichuan, “the main problem found was one of governance—that some leading cadres operated at the expense of the public interest, trading jobs and promotion for money, and colluding to form a conveyor belt of interests, in which economic interests became political interests, whereby officials intervened in policy decisions on natural resources, water, electricity, land sales and government procurement, in ways that would benefit themselves and their associates.” Party officials, according to this article, “used festivals, weddings and funerals to accept bribes, and they dispensed bonuses, vehicles, and other subsidies to well-connected friends and families.”

A major source of those problems wasn’t immorality, according to the report, but that “cadres lack the will and enthusiasm to reform.” Too many officials, the article says, are “lazy, loose, preferring to float along and be dragged by others, unwilling to experiment with the new.”

More In Anticorruption
That there’s a connection between corruption and a lack of commitment is also argued in a recent essay on the complications of training officials in the party’s theoretical magazine Seeking Truth. Articles and commentaries in Seeking Truth are often used to air concerns in the upper echelons of the party about current practices; the content is often a clue to larger obstacles that the Chinese leadership faces.

The commentary, which looks at Sichuan but speaks generally, notes that “while there must be selfless dedication and a strong sense of responsibility on the part of officials, we must focus on developing cadres who are not afraid of difficulties, not afraid of pressure or fear of failure–pioneers, who dare to stand up at the critical moment to take the initiative to accept new challenges and find new ways to take the lead.”

Evidently, there are far more of the other kind of cadre in the Communist Party these days.

That unwillingness to embrace change may be due to the anxiety that hangs over many cadres given Xi’s anti-corruption crusade. No official can be sure who’s next to be accused—one’s political patron, one’s pal, or oneself. That’s led to many Chinese officials either laying low or fleeing potential investigation. Many are also reluctant to carry out changes out of concern they might go badly and end up exposing them to scrutiny and reprimand.

For decades, the practice of Chinese politics has rested on the assumption that appointments and promotions are less about performance in the field than they are about connections—and those connections rest on payments and favors, which are now being pursued and prosecuted as “corruption”. Yet aside from admonitions from Beijing for officials to behave better and the odd nod towards the need for officials to “reach out to the grassroots”, instructions are at best vague as to how cadres would actually do those things when the political system that sustains corruption remains largely intact.

Consequently, there’s little reason for officials to find the fortitude to break their reliance on politics as it’s practiced currently. Indeed, the anti-corruption campaign actually works to cement those connections further, as officials seek protection against Beijing’s crusade. The more Beijing escalates the crackdown, the more entrenched those existing political ties become.

The Xi leadership’s drive to clean up corruption in the party is clearly meant to clear the way for officials who are more resilient and responsive to a still-skeptical public. Xi’s crusade isn’t aimed at restructuring China’s political system; in that way, it’s been less destabilizing so far. But the strategy won’t have much long-term success if it ends up inhibiting the very cadres and qualities that it’s been trying to foster.

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Russell Leigh Moses is the Dean of Academics and Faculty at The Beijing Center for Chinese Studies. He is writing a book on the changing role of power in the Chinese political system.
 
France to assist hunt for corrupt officials
The French government will assist the Chinese judiciary by confiscating the illegal assets many corrupt officials have transferred to France, a senior official from the French Ministry of Justice has said.

France and China will share the seized funds.

Robert Gelli, director of the Criminal Affairs Department of the French Ministry of Justice, said that in the following weeks the ministry will strengthen cooperation with its Chinese counterparts to track down corrupt Chinese officials and uncover their transferred funds.

"We will try to locate the ill-gotten funds that Chinese corrupt officials sent to France and take immediate actions to freeze them, such as houses, cars and bank savings and other investments," Gelli said.

"In addition, for each individual case, we will negotiate with our Chinese counterparts to share the seized funds in a proper proportion," he said.

In recent years, a number of economic fugitives, including many corrupt officials, have fled to the United Sates, Canada, Australia and European countries such as the Netherlands and France, to avoid Chinese judicial authorities.

"Most are government officials, executives or senior managers in State-owned companies who are accused of corruption, accepting bribes or embezzlement," said Zhang Xiaoming, deputy director of the Judicial Assistance and Foreign Affairs Department of the Ministry of Justice.

Celine Guillet, a senior official from the Criminal Affairs Department of the French Ministry of Justice, said that although a Sino-French bilateral extradition treaty is still waiting for approval by the French Parliament, the two sides will enhance judicial cooperation to nab fugitives and uncover their illegal assets in accordance with mutual legal assistance in criminal matters and other reciprocity regulations.

Huang Feng, a law professor at Beijing Normal University who specializes in extradition issues, said the confiscation and sharing of seized assets between China and other countries is consistent with international practice.

For example, the judiciary in the US, Japan and Singapore have agreements with other countries to share seized ill-gotten funds and China will sign a formal agreement with Canada to return and share seized assets, he said.

Last month, China and Australia agreed to enhance judicial cooperation on extradition of corrupt officials, according to the Ministry of Public Security.

Australian judicial authorities have a priority list of 100 suspected Chinese economic fugitives and they will conduct joint operations within weeks, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

By the end of August, China had signed 51 mutual legal assistance agreements for criminal matters and 39 bilateral extradition treaties, according to the Ministry of Justice.
 
APEC anti-corruption deal closes doors to economic fugitives abroad
By Gao Bo

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The eyes of the whole world have been focused on Beijing during the APEC forum. Among the achievements of this forum, one has drawn particular attention. In the just concluded APEC Ministerial Meeting, the Beijing Anti-corruption Proclamation has been adopted, and all sides have agreed to establish a law-enforcement network to boost cross-border anti-graft cooperation.

The Beijing proclamation shows that the APEC members will enhance anti-graft cooperation from a brand new perspective. This proclamation marks the first international anti-corruption declaration led and drafted by China. China's leadership in this framework has profound significance for establishing a new anti-graft order in the Asia-Pacific region and even the entire world.

Apparently, the highlight of the proclamation rests on deepening international cooperation to arrest overseas economic criminals and recover their ill-gotten gains. This area will be the key indicator to measure the execution of the proclamation.

The outdated framework of anti-graft corruption has long been a disadvantage to backward countries. Their efforts to fight corruption are often constrained by some obsolete and fogyish mindsets in terms of state system and ideology. They also encounter many obstacles in the international community, such as discrepancies in terms of laws and regulations, incompatibility of fact determination and a lack of judicial cooperation.

These inadequacies have been abused by those economic fugitives. By taking advantage of such loopholes, they are able to purchase legal identities, launder their black money and live a rich and decent life after fleeing their native countries.

So far, China's anti-corruption campaign, which was launched soon after the new leadership took office, has made dazzling achievements at home. It is high time that China should reach out its hands to overseas fugitives and take them back.

The Beijing proclamation is not propaganda full of empty and grandiose words. It has managed to grasp the optimum point at which practical cooperation can be conducted. It has also successfully gained leverage to balance various demands and keep divergences under control.

By integrating international anti-graft cooperation with the common interests of all economies, the proclamation plays a critical role in speeding up the establishment of an all-out network to crack down on economic fugitives.

Preventing economic suspects from fleeing and recovering their misappropriated gains are more difficult than just capturing these economic fugitives. China should keep hold of a dominant say in implementing the proclamation, and enhance cooperation in three ways.

The first is to strengthen information exchange to make sure all involved parties share abundant information about these fugitives so that they can be identified and put under surveillance.

The second is to build a case library and a training center to circulate on-the-front and advanced experience in surveillance, investigation, and case-files against corruption, bribery, money laundering and illicit trade.

The third is to improve China's capabilities to punish these fugitives in accordance with the law, such as amending the Criminal Law and the Criminal Procedure Law.
China should make more breakthroughs in negotiations with foreign countries, such as concluding more extradition treaties and making the usual havens for these criminals shut their doors.

With this inter-connected framework, China should be more confident and capable to catch these runaways, and justice will be done.
 
No worries. US politic is controlled by Zionist and as corrupt as any gov't.

"Ex-CIA Agent: Real problem is leaders of the Jewish American community who influence and corrupt our Congress"

 

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