China's National Audit Office (NAO) has exposed a number of corruption cases,
involving the Ministry of Land and Resources (MLR), the State Bureau of
Surveying and Mapping (SBSM) and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China
(ICBC).
Embezzlement of funds dedicated to special projects valued at 6.307 million
yuan (about 760,000 US dollars) was uncovered in the MLR's 2003 financial
budget, according to a NAO report unveiled Monday.
The auditing report said the funds designed to special projectswere used as
wages and bonuses to ministry functionaries or to make up administrative
expenses between 2000 and 2003,
Meanwhile, fees worth 4.18 million yuan (some 500,000 US dollars) in total,
charged by the SBSM has not promptly turned over to the central government,
noted the auditing outcome report of the SBSM's 2003 financial budget.
Moreover, auditors found 30 clues relating to illegal cases with the ICBC,
involving as much as 6.9 billion yuan (some 830 million US dollars) of misuse
funds, added the auditing outcome report on ICBC's assets and liabilities in
2002.
From October 2003 to February 2004, the NAO audited the financial accounts of
eight ministries and commissions directly under the State Council, or the
central Chinese government.
The report also acknowledged that the people concerned in the MLR, SBSM, ICBC
cases have been criticized, penalized or fired, and part of the embezzled fund
has been returned. Citing an example, 368 ICBC liable officials or staffers have
been punished and 42 others dismissed.
On June 24, Auditor-General Li Jinhua told the national legislature that
embezzlement of public funds was discovered in 55ministries and commissions
under the State Council.
According to the auditing report, a total of 41 ministries and commissions
impropriated as much as 1.42 billion yuan (approximately 185 million US dollars)
of money earmarked to special projects for construction of residential and
office buildings for their own use.
Twenty-four cases laid bare by the auditing departments have been looked into
meticulously and dealt with by the supervision departments over the past year,"
the official with the Ministry ofSupervision said, noting that the probe into
seven cases has been concluded.
The central government increased its transparency of its administrative
procedures and tried very hard to cut the administrative costs by the means of
auditing the implementation of central budget, experts said.
Premier Wen Jiabao urged all government functionaries to cooperate with
auditing and supervision departments in July, calling for the institution of
more rigid and stricter mechanism of accountability. Departments and officials
with powers should beheld accountable for their misdeeds, Wen said.