China shows no mercy at corruption
10/3/2008 17:03
The work reports of the Supreme People's Court and the Supreme People's
Procuratorate, made by top judge Xiao Yang and top procurator Jia Chunwang
today, sent the same signal: China's fight against corruption has been
intensified, but the overall situation remains grave. Procurator-general Jia
Chunwang said that 35 officials at the provincial or ministerial level, 930 at
the municipal level and nearly 14,000 at or above the county level were
investigated for embezzlement, bribery, misappropriation of public funds in the
past five years. And Xiao Yang, president of the SPC and chief justice, said
that Chinese courts tried and concluded 120,000 embezzlement, bribery and
dereliction of duty cases, up 12.15 percent from the previous five
years. "Although the country's anti-corruption mechanism under construction
has played an important role in checking the rise and spread of the vice, the
general situation remain worrisome," said Mu Ping, an NPC deputy and head of the
people's procuratorate of Beijing. Mu said that the occurrences of major
corruption cases in Beijing were involving more illicit money over the past
three years than ever before. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said in his work
report last week that "we will attach even greater importance to combating
corruption and encouraging integrity, and fight corruption unequivocally."
Xinhua
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