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BEIJING, Feb. 23 (Xinhuanet) -- China will audit the
financial statements of six leading state-owned enterprises and financial
records of a number of provincial governors and ministers, this year.
Itis a substantial effort to
increase financial accountability in the country which is also seeing the
maturation of its audit systems.
"We'll standardize the auditing procedures of
officials at the ministerial-level," said Linghu An, the deputy auditor general
of the National Audit Office here Wednesday.
The six major enterprises are among 51 major
enterprises under the supervision of the State-owned Assets Supervision and
Administration Commission. The presidents of the 51 major state-owned
enterprises are directly appointed by the State Council.
The country is continuing to develop an evaluation
mechanism for officials of both government and state owned enterprises, said
Linghu.
"We will draft regulations on auditing fiscal
accountability and hope to have them submitted to the State Council, or the
central government, by the end of 2006," Linghu said.
Chinese auditors uncovered more than 35 billion yuan
(about 4.37 billion U.S. dollars) in illegal use of funds during a nationwide
audit of 22,000 Party and government officials in the first 11 months of 2005,
according to the NAO's preliminary report.
Meanwhile, an audit of 6,020 enterprises found that
44.9 billion yuan (about 5.6 billion US dollars) has been misspent or
misrepresented on financial records, the NAO statistics showed. Enditem
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