What becomes clear is that a culture of corruption was allowed that developed throughout the governing apparatus and used by Zemin to support his long term control. It has all fallen apart now, but the process seems unnaturally slow because so many are involved and real instability needs to be avoided.
Yet it is also clear that such a culture will also arise again simply because we have a pyramid of power system. In the meantime we now get a generation of sane governance.
eliminating corruption can only be achieved by rigorous application of what i describe as the rule opf twelve which is organized about the base itself..
Yet it is also clear that such a culture will also arise again simply because we have a pyramid of power system. In the meantime we now get a generation of sane governance.
eliminating corruption can only be achieved by rigorous application of what i describe as the rule opf twelve which is organized about the base itself..
Behind Xi Jinping’s ‘Crushing Momentum’ in Cleaning up Corruption
At a recent meeting of the Chinese regime’s top elites,
Chinese leader Xi Jinping sent the strongest signal to date that he is
fast closing in on Jiang Zemin, the former Communist Party dictator and
Xi’s chief political antagonist.
“The battle against corruption has gained crushing momentum,” read a
statement carried by official mouthpiece Xinhua on a Dec. 28 Politburo
meeting chaired by Xi.
Xi’s latest assessment of the anti-corruption campaign is his most
positive to date. At the annual all-hands meeting of the Communist
Party’s anti-corruption agency in January 2015, Xi said that
anti-corruption work “hasn’t achieved an overwhelming victory,”
according to Xinhua. At the next meeting in January 2016, Xi noted that
“the battle against corruption is gaining overwhelming momentum.”
On the surface, Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign does seem like a
genuine effort at wiping out malfeasance in the regime, and overturning
the culture of corruption in China. State controlled and overseas
Chinese newspapers carry stories of scared officials and their kin
canceling big banquets, trading in their sports cars for modest saloons,
and giving up golf, a “rich man’s game” long frowned upon by the Party.
And according to official figures, Xi’s efforts at “strictly
governing the Party” are substantial—over one million officials have
been purged, more than 200 of whom are high-ranking civilian and
military personnel.
But Xi’s anti-corruption campaign has always had underlying purpose
of eliminating a rival political faction led by Jiang Zemin. Jiang had
stayed de facto ruler for over a decade after handing over the reins of
the regime to Hu Jintao through keeping his loyalists in high office.
Many lower officials also back Jiang because he allowed them to become
rich and powerful through corruption and kleptocracy.
Xi has hinted this year that his campaign is aimed at wresting
political power from Jiang, something that is never indicated in
official discourse, but is obvious when reading between the lines.
Powerful political allies of Jiang who have been purged—Bo Xilai,
Zhou Yongkang, Guo Boxiong, Xu Caihou, Ling Jihua—have frequently been
named and shamed by Xi in official speeches and in editorials in Party
newspapers. They are described as ambitious political conspirators who
have been cast out of the Party and jailed.
The leadership of key Party organs in the hands of the Jiang
faction—public security, propaganda, offices that oversee Hong Kong—have
been chastised by anti-corruption investigators for lacking “political
awareness and sensitivity,” Party speak for Xi’s orders not being
properly followed or executed.
Jiang’s three allies in the seven member Politburo Standing
Committee, the regime’s top decision making body, have been directly or
indirectly served warnings.
Associates
of vice premier Zhang Gaoli who gained top office in Tianjin when Zhang
was leader of the provincial-level city were recently investigated for
corruption, a move that may foreshadow an eventual inquiry of Zhang
himself.
Meanwhile, a pro-Beijing Hong Kong newspaper
has accused Chinese legislature chief Zhang Dejiang and propaganda boss
Liu Yunshan of bringing “calamity” to Hong Kong, and claims that they
have thus far escaped being held accountable because their political
client is Jiang Zemin.
Jiang himself appears to be in check since August 2015, when the state-run People’s Daily ran an editorial cautioning retired elite officials against interfering in contemporary politics.
Jiang hasn’t been seen in public since reviewing a big military parade in 2015. He also failed to attend
the funerals of prominent Party cadres, a ominous sign in a regime
where the true status and power of top officials are communicated
through seemingly trivia events.
In March 2016, Shanghai-based human rights lawyer Zheng Enchong
told Epoch Times that Jiang and his two sons have been placed under
some form of control, citing “extremely reliable channels” and the
relaxations in his own situation. Zheng, having tussled with powerful
members of the Jiang faction in Shanghai, is presently under house
arrest.
In June 2016, Epoch Times learned from a member of a security detailed assigned to retired senior cadres that Jiang was forcibly removed from his residence on June 10 by the Chinese paramilitary, who then dropped him off inside a military compound.
That Jiang, and very possibly even his right-hand man and former
regime vice chairman Zeng Qinghong, are in deep trouble was hinted at
publicly by Xi Jinping with talk of the anti-corruption campaign’s
“crushing momentum” at the Dec. 28 Politburo session. This statement
suggests a “major watershed in the situation,” according to Xin Ziling, a
retired Chinese defense official with channels to moderate voices in
the top leadership.
“Now all members in the Jiang faction, and those who still have hope
in Jiang’s faction, can see clearly the situation, and will be
enormously shocked,” Xin continued. “Soon, rats will leave a sinking
ship.”
Xin believes that with Xi Jinping recently harping on the discipline of the elite leadership, “those found to be problematic and have to be removed will go.”
“Zhang Dejiang has created sharp problems in Hong Kong, and Zeng
Qinghong is still backing him,” Xin said. Zhang, a Politburo Standing
Committee member, “could very possibly be taken down; that is not
impossible.”
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