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BEIJING, March 13 (Xinhuanet) -- A Chinese political
advisor has urged the introduction of a wining ban on civil servants across the
country in their working hours as well as lunchtime of workingdays, to curb the
rampant phenomenon of "banqueting with public funds."
"The nationwide ban, once in place, will hopefully
make the practice of civil servants dining and wining with public money part of
history," said Zong Licheng, a member of the Tenth National Committee of the
Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the country's top
advisory body which just concluded a 10-day annual full session on Monday
morning.
Public money spent on banquets of civil servants
reached 200 billion yuan (25 billion U.S. dollars) in 2002, a sharp increase
compared with 37 billion yuan (4.6 billion dollars) in 1989, said Zong, citing
media reports.
"The public money spent on the civil servants'
banquet tables each year is almost equal to the total construction cost of the
Three Gorges Dam," exclaimed Zong, referring to the gigantic hydropower and
water conservancy project on China's longest river,the Yangtze.
Wining on three occasions should be strictly banned,
namely receptions and working meals within the government, lunchtime of working
days of the civil servants, and on-duty hours of the civil servants, said Zong.
Citing the successful practice in recent years of the
Ministry of Public Security in barring police personnel across the country from
wining in service hours, Zong said the wining ban should be introduced to all
government departments and the entire civil service contingent as early as
possible.
"The ban should also be written into the regulations
on the management of civil servants, to guarantee its implementation," headded.
Extravagance and waste of public money by civil
servants have become one of the hot topics at the just-concluded annual session
of the Chinese political advisors, who also shoulder the responsibility of
supervising government performance and suggesting ways of improvement.
Liu Guangfu, another CPPCC National Committee member
from East China's Anhui Province, has earlier criticized the excessive
government spending on officials' cars.
"It costs the country some 300 billion yuan (37.5
billion dollars) each year to keep the nearly 3 million cars and their drivers
for governments at all levels, which even exceeds the country's annual defense
budget," said Liu.
However, only one third of these government cars'
usage is for public purposes, while officials and even the drivers frequently
use them for private affairs, said the advisor.
China's defense budget for 2006 is 280.729 billion
yuan (35 billion dollars). Enditem |