Yes it was clearly time to clean house. what is impressive is the numbers though. We have 10,000 investrigations leading to over 2,000 convictions. That powerfully informs the legitimacy of those investigations. Real work takes place.
Recall the obscene 99% conviction rates of some USA prosecutors. That is not possible without rigging the justice system.
This should bring fake build outs to s grinding halt. The threat of prosecution just became extremely legit. Rather delightfully attendees at a banquet for Chinese medical professionals all excused themselves hurriedly when a wealthy Chinese lady pulled out her handbag to flash red envelops. A few colleagues had recently been shot. Definitely no longer business as usual.
China Corruption Watch: 10,000 People Investigated in Q1, and Sinopec President Faces Probe
By Frank Fang, Epoch Times | April 27, 2015
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1336365-china-corruption-watch-10000-people-investigated-in-q1-and-sinopec-president-faces-probe/
Editor’s note: The anti-corruption campaign surging through
China is the most significant political event in the country’s recent
history. Led by Chinese Communist Party chief Xi Jinping and his deputy
Wang Qishan, it has heavily targeted officials closely tied to Jiang
Zemin, for years the Party’s behind-the-scenes godfather. The campaign’s
non-political aspect has also seen a mass cleansing of corrupt
officials at a lower ranks around the country. This regular column
documents the assault as events take place.
The Chinese regime’s anti-corruption watchdog must be working overtime in the first quarter of 2015.
From January to end March, a total of 9,636 people were investigated
on corruption charges in 7,556 cases, the Supreme People’s
Procuratorate, the Communist Party’s top prosecuting body, said on
Monday. About a third of the individuals were prosecuted.
According to state mouthpiece Xinhua, 2,573 government officials were investigated.
Bribery made up the most of the corruption cases, and about 88 percent of them involved sums of over 100,000 yuan ($16,000).
The procuratorate says it intends to step up efforts to deal with
corruption in the provision of social security, public health,
education, and other areas of public interest.
The Party’s anti-corruption agency is also aggressively pursuing its
agenda abroad—on April 22, the Central Commission for Discipline
Inspection (CCDI) gave global police organization INTERPOL a list of 100
fugitive officials, the bulk of whom are hiding in the United States.
Sinopec President Probed
Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption drive also making significant inroads into China’s energy sector.
On Monday, CCDI announced on its website that Wang Tianpu, the
second-highest ranked official in the state-owned Sinopec Group, is
being investigated for “serious violations of discipline and the law,”
official parlance for corruption.
Wang isn’t the first Sinopec official to be probed—Xue Wandong, the
vice-chairman and general manager of Sinopec Oilfield Services Corp, was
taken in by CCDI last December.
Former officials, of China National Petrochemical Corp (CNPC),
particularly those linked with disgraced ex-security czar Zhou Yongkang,
have been hit hardest. This month, Jiang Jiemin, who once headed CNPC,
went on trial; Zhou, who was once a secretary in CNPC, was indicted for
bribery, abuse of power, and leaking state secrets.
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