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                     China's Bolsters Corruption Crackdown

   by William Ide

   When Xi Jinping visited the southern city of Shenzhen last week, his
   first regional inspection since he was appointed as Communist Party's
   chief, Chinese media highlighted Xi's explicit orders not to lay down
   red carpets or prepare lavish banquets.
   Analysts say this low-key approach is just part of an intensifying
   effort by China's new leaders to crack down on one of the biggest
   sources of public discontent, official corruption. But how far Chinese
   officials are willing to go remains unclear.
   "The question is what do we find behind those words, are they really
   trying to change or reform something or are they using these buzzwords
   to legitimize the status quo and to justify the use anti-corruption as
   a means to solve political conflicts in a non-violent, more or less
   civilized way," Flora Sapio, is a professor of Chinese law at the
   Chinese University of Hong Kong.
   Anti-corruption declarations
   China's leaders have long talked about an urgent need to address
   corruption.
   Xi Jinping, Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have all
   talked about the threat corruption poses to the Communist Party and the
   state.
   In 2007, Hu even likened corruption to "a time bomb buried under
   society."
   But perhaps the strongest remark came in the late 90s, when then
   premier Zhu Rongji remarked in comments about corruption: "I'll have
   100 coffins prepared. Ninety-nine are for corrupt officials and the
   last one is for myself."
   Despite these many pronouncements, corruption remains rampant.
   According a 2007 study by Minxin Pei, director of the China Program at
   Washington D.C.'s Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 10
   percent of government spending in China is used for kickbacks and
   bribes, while less than three percent of corrupt officials end up being
   punished.
   Tide changing, cyber sleuths
   In recent weeks, however, news reports have detailed the launch of
   investigations and dismissal of a growing number of officials. In many
   cases, the details of their alleged illicit activities and abuses were
   first leaked through social media sites online.
   Some believe this cycle of exposing official corruption on social media
   - which pressures officials to investigate and has led in some cases to
   dismissals - is a sign of progress.
   Others warn of the dangers of citizens making public information that
   belongs in a court of law.
   Hu Xingdou, a professor at the Beijing Institute of Technology, says
   that the use of microblog sites such as China's Twitter-like Weibo is
   more a reflection of a systematic lack of transparency in China.
   "While the use of Weibo, the Internet and mistresses is the Chinese way
   of fighting corruption, it's not a comprehensive approach," Hu says.
   "The key is creating a more modern system of fighting corruption."
   Party monitors itself
   In China, the power to investigate party officials is in the hands of a
   Communist party body, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection,
   which exists at each level of government and has branches inside large
   state companies, as well.
   When abuse of power is reported, the commission needs to get clearance
   from a senior party body before it can investigate the cadres' alleged
   wrongdoing.
   "You have a party anti-corruption body that is monitoring, supervising,
   investigating and to a certain extent also punishing, and handling
   cases of corruption. So monitoring and supervision are strongly biased
   in favor of interior mechanism which are by definition not
   transparent," Sapio says.
   Emboldened by the leadership's recent calls to end corruption, many
   scholars in China are now making suggestions about how the system could
   be improved and other reforms that might strengthen supervision.
   Sunshine law
   One reform on the table is the establishment of a "sunshine law" that
   would require officials to disclose their assets.
   Sapio says that a sunshine policy might help uncover minor forms of
   corruption, but notes that a number of factors might make it difficult
   to carry out.
   "What happens if it is found out that you possess property in excess of
   your legitimate income? Would you automatically be criminally
   investigated? Would you be investigated by party bodies? Depending on
   the answer each of these questions will receive in the future an asset
   disclosure may help place a check on corruption, or alternatively it
   might just enable party bodies to have more information on party
   members," she says.
   On Sunday, just as Xi Jinping was touring Shenzhen, the southern
   province of Guangdong revealed plans to make officials' assets publicly
   available in three counties.
   Hu Xingdou says it is still unclear how this will work. "In the past
   that has only meant that information would be disclosed internally. It
   does not mean that they will allow that information about assets to be
   made public in newspapers or on the Internet for people to see," Hu
   says.
   Since 2010, low-level officials have been required to disclose their
   assets to their superiors, but such reports are not released to the
   public.
   An independent body
   Ren Jianming, director of the anti-corruption and governance research
   center at Beijing's Tsinghua University, is one of the eight scholars
   who recently met with Wang Qishan, the newly appointed head of China's
   anti-graft commission.
   Ren says that during the meeting some specialists suggested improvement
   to the asset-disclosure system, but he added that those measures are
   not enough.
   "We have to go more in depth and look at why the policies we had in
   place in the past did not stop corruption," he says.
   In Ren's view, past failures stemmed from a lack of independence in the
   commission's work.
   "For an organ to be functioning it needs to be independent and it needs
   to have complete authority over its work and its finances, that is how
   it can have a beneficial effect into the body's monitoring system," Ren
   says.
   Looking to neighbors
   Analysts say China is looking at its neighbors, including Singapore and
   Hong Kong, to shape a more effective anti-corruption system at home.
   In Hong Kong's case, the government established a special commission in
   the 1970s, when the city-state was plagued by widespread corruption.
   The organ was given substantial funds and complete independence to
   carry out its investigations, which catapulted Hong Kong into the ranks
   of the world's cleanest governments.
   But in China, where the Communist party exerts such broad control - of
   police, the courts and the government itself - empowering an
   independent body to monitor state officials is likely to be seen as
   threat to the party's existence.
   Some in China say that, although they trust the new leadership's
   determination to push for change, making that happen may depend on more
   than strong-willed individuals.
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References

   1. http://www.voanews.com/content/china-bolsters-corruption-crackdown/1564113.html