Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




SINO DAILY
Watches, mistresses on show as China highlights graft
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 8, 2012


Lurid reports of Chinese officials sporting luxury watches or promoting their twin mistresses are being hailed by state media as proof of a corruption crackdown -- but real reforms remain a distant prospect.

Less than a month after Xi Jinping ascended to China's most powerful post as head of the Communist Party and proclaimed the scourge of graft an existential threat to the ruling organisation and the country, official outlets are striving to show action is being taken.

Several senior Chinese officials have been placed under investigation, including the vice party head of Sichuan province and a former deputy mayor of the manufacturing hub of Shenzhen.

A web page run by the Communist party's official newspaper, the People's Daily, hailed their fall as "the start of an anti-corruption storm".

But the breadth and depth of the campaign are still unclear, even as corruption threatens the ruling party's claim to legitimacy -- a recent Pew Research Center survey found 50 percent of Chinese considered official graft a very big problem.

Since Xi's promotion after the Communist Party Congress, a motley parade of lower-level officials have been featured by state-run media after being exposed, including a police chief being investigated for allegedly keeping twins as mistresses and giving one a local government job.

The mayor of Lanzhou, the capital of Gansu province, was pictured apparently wearing a range of expensive watches, and an official in the southwestern metropolis of Chongqing was sacked after a video of him having sex with a mistress spread like wildfire.

A Chinese investigative reporter on Thursday used Sina Weibo -- a website similar to Twitter -- to accuse the head of China's National Energy Administration of fraud, graft and sending death threats.

The official, Liu Tienan, was travelling in Russia with Wang Qishan, China's newly appointed anti-corruption chief, the state-run Global Times reported, making the accusations potentially embarrassing for the senior official.

The energy body quickly moved to dismiss the report, but the original post on Sina Weibo was not deleted by censors on Friday, as often happens with items critical of high-level officials.

The state-run Global Times gushed over the post, saying there had been a "surge" in online whistleblowing since Xi's installation, with 17 officials reported by "mistresses, journalists, web users and inside sources".

But despite the reports' prominence the figure amounts to a minuscule fraction of the Communist Party's 82 million strong membership.

Xi has been widely expected to order a new crackdown on corruption following a traumatic year for the party that included the downfall of top official Bo Xilai, now facing criminal trial for bribery.

Corruption investigations against party members are dealt with internally, raising allegations that they are used as tools in factional infighting.

Failed attempts by Ling Jihua, a close ally of President Hu Jintao, to cover up the death of his son in a Ferrari accident in March reportedly played a key role in the pre-congress manoeuvring.

Li Chuncheng, the Sichuan vice party head, was promoted during Hu's reign as party chief, and the probe "looks like it's politically motivated", said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, a professor at Hong Kong Baptist University.

"There is a link with the weakening of the Hu Jintao faction."

China has no laws compelling officials to declare their assets publicly, and there is widespread suspicion that regulations forbidding party officials from engaging in business activities are routinely flouted.

"The whole system is opaque, there's no way to check," Cabestan said.

While some senior Chinese officials have said that office-holders will be forced to declare their assets in future, no timetable for such reforms has been announced.

Significant changes are unlikely any time soon as they would threaten the party's influence, said Cabestan.

"There is opacity in the whole system which will remain unchanged unless there is potentially destabilising political reform," he said.

Control over the media by the party, which can use its powers to scotch corruption exposes, also hampers anti-corruption efforts.

In the meantime there is increasing scepticism of anti-corruption drives among the Chinese public, said Joseph Cheng, a political analyst at the City University of Hong Kong.

"If you simply rely on a campaign of crackdown on so-called big cats at the deputy level, this attracts a bit of publicity, but we all know this is not going to solve the problem," he said.

"Ordinary people have seen too many crackdowns already."

.


Related Links
China News from SinoDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SINO DAILY
Nobel laureate Mo Yan takes swipe at critics in lecture
Stockholm (AFP) Dec 07, 2012
Chinese Nobel literature laureate Mo Yan on Friday took a swipe at his critics in the traditional Nobel lecture, saying their target "had nothing to do" with him and urging them to read his books. The writer has walked a tightrope during his stay in Stockholm, where he will pick up the award on Monday, with some pundits supporting his own claims that he is "independent", and others casting h ... read more


SINO DAILY
EU ag interests disagree on supply chain

Environmental hangover from Indonesia's palm oil thirst

Glencore gets Chinese go-ahead for 6.1bn Viterra buy

Destroy lab stocks of eradicated cattle disease: OIE

SINO DAILY
New '4-D' transistor is preview of future computers

Ames Laboratory scientists develop indium-free organic light-emitting diodes

Research discovery could revolutionise semiconductor manufacture

Engineers pave the way towards 3D printing of personal electronics

SINO DAILY
US agency chief seeks to ease airplane electronics ban

Japan pedal power aims for human flight record

Swiss to get Swedish jets cheaper than Swedes: report

Canada reconsidering F-35 fighter purchase: reports

SINO DAILY
Work on automatic control of driverless vehicles through intersections receives recognition

GM says China car sales on track for record 2012

Volvo eyes 'no-death' goal in its new cars by 2020

Russia demands answers after 190 km traffic jam

SINO DAILY
Groupon surges on takeover chatter

Mercosur puts a brave front on divisions

Chinese insurer PICC soars on Hong Kong debut

Hong Kong leader warns of talent drain over housing

SINO DAILY
Global drive in support of Brazil's threatened Awa tribe

World's biggest, oldest trees are dying: research

'Come out of the forest' to save the trees

Canopy structure more important to climate than leaf nitrogen levels

SINO DAILY
Seeing stars, finding nukes: Radio telescopes can spot clandestine nuclear tests

URI oceanography student uses crashing waves on shorelines to study Earth's interior

Raytheon technology instrumental in creating "Black Marble" image

New test adds to scientists' understanding of Earth's history, resources

SINO DAILY
Nature Materials Study: Boosting Heat Transfer With Nanoglue

New optical tweezers trap specimens just a few nanometers across

How 'transparent' is graphene?

A graphene nanotube hybrid




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement