Chinese President Xi Jinping’s anti-graft drive,which has
targeted officials at all levels, has punished more than 1.3 million people in
five years, the anti-corruption watchdog said Sunday.
The anti-corruption
campaign, which Jinping launched shortly after becoming the Communist Party’s
leader in 2012, was meant to fell both high-level “tigers” within the party and
“flies” in lower bureaucratic ranks.
More than 1.3
million officials at the township level or lower have been punished in the past
five years, including 648,000 village officials, said the party’s Central
Commission for Discipline Inspection. The announcement comes just as the
Communist Party is preparing to convene, starting Oct.18 in a congress that
takes place once every five years to anoint the party’s top leadership.
Jinping is largely
expected to remain president for another five years but some reshuffling
might take place in the Politburo Standing Committee, the top decision-making
body. Critics say the president has used the anti-graft campaign as a way to
purge political opponents and consolidate power, along with other
strategies such as tightening the control over state media and restructuring
the military. Former high-flyers whose heads have rolled in the anti-corruption
drive include; Zhou Yongkang, a former security chief and Standing Committee
member.
Others were Bo
Xilai, former Commerce Ministry and Governor of Liaoning Province; and Sun
Zhengcai, a former party secretary of Chongqing who had been seen as a
potential successor to Jinping. The head of the anti-corruption agency, Wang
Qishan, is Jinping’s close friend and might remain in the Standing Committee
despite passing the informal retirement age of 68.
No comments:
Post a Comment