Advertisement
Advertisement
China’s Communist Party
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Chinese President Xi Jinping addresses the party’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection’s third plenary session on Monday. Photo: Xinhua

Xi Jinping tells China’s corruption hunters to show no mercy in ‘severe and complex’ battle

  • As the anti-corruption campaign enters its 11th year, the Chinese leader calls for ‘heavier punishments’ and a focus on ‘high-risk’ areas
  • Finance, pharmaceuticals, state-owned businesses and infrastructure are among the sectors in the party watchdog’s sights in 2024
The battle against corruption remains “severe and complex” and there should be “absolutely no mercy” in rooting out the problem, Chinese President Xi Jinping has told the country’s top graft-busters.

“Facing an ongoing severe and complex situation, [the crackdown on] corruption can never turn back or slacken, [people should] show absolutely no mercy and the charge must be forever sounded,” he said on Monday, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

In a speech to the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) on the first day of its third plenary session, Xi kicked off the 11th year of his signature anti-corruption campaign with a call to deepen the clean-up drive.

The campaign, which has netted thousands of officials since 2013, last year intensively targeted the country’s vast and opaque financial and healthcare sector.

This year, the focus should be on “high-risk areas”, such as finance, state-owned businesses, energy, pharmaceuticals, infrastructure and engineering, said Xi, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party.

Will China’s anti-corruption crackdown remedy its healthcare woes?

Xi called on the CCDI cadres to “fully centralise funds and resources to … clean up hidden risks, punish bribes and corruption” to give people “a greater sense of gains”, according to the CCTV report.

He also emphasised the need for “persistent purification of the political ecosystem” and called for heavier punishments for bribers who corrupt officials to “serve as a warning to others”.

The meeting was chaired by CCDI boss Li Xi and attended by members of the Politburo – China’s highest policymakers – as well as state councillors and party heads of the legislature, courts and political advisory organs, and the military top brass. It was also broadcast to top provincial and People’s Liberation Army (PLA) officials.

In 2018, five years after he launched the corruption-busting campaign, Xi declared “a crushing victory” against the problem.

The country’s battle against corruption set a record high last year, with the CCDI launching investigations into 45 senior officials, according to a tally by the South China Morning Post in January.

The Post’s tally showed a 40 per cent increase compared to the previous year, when 32 high-ranking officials were placed under investigation by the CCDI.

‘Tiger hunt’: China’s war on corruption sees record purge of senior officials

Two weeks ahead of this year’s third plenary session of the CCDI, the party widened the scope of offences and punishments with a new regulation on party discipline that includes the prospect of expulsion for reading sensitive materials in private.

Unflattering histories of the party, as well as publications that reflect poorly on the party’s policies, defame or slander party and national leaders, or distort the history of the party, the People’s Republic of China, and the PLA are all on the list.

5