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BEIJING, March 25 -- China has arrested over 400
corrupt officials up until the end of February in the country's second
nation-wide anti-corruption campaign which began at the start of this year,
reported the Democracy & Law Times newspaper.
Afraid of alerting the criminals, the Chinese Supreme
People's Procuratorate and the Chinese Ministry of Public Security commenced
their campaign secretly during the Spring Festival, without any media coverage.
The former vice mayor of Renqiu City in Northern
Hebei Provice, Lian Rongguang, who also held the position of the President of
the People's Bank of China's Cangzhou Branch in Hebei, was among those arrested.
He has been accused of taking bribes of over 1 million yuan, or 120 thousand US
dollars, and embezzling over 3 million yuan, or 362 thousand US dollars of
public money.
The Chinese Supreme People's Procuratorate and the
Chinese Ministry of Public Security have been directed to place information on
corrupt officials who have absconded onto their web sites this year. The idea is
that any person named on the list may be arrested immediately by regional police
offices.
Following information placed on the internet, police
in Sichuan Province arrested the former manager of the Dachuan Branch of the
Sichuan Changhong Electric Corporation, Zhang Chuanhong, who was on the run for
8 years accused of misappropriating 20 million yuan, or 2.4 million US dollars
of public money.
Meanwhile, police in central China's Henan Province
have captured 28 run-away officials within 20 days with the help of the
Internet.
Finance departments at various levels have also
allocated funds to back the national campaign. They will, for example, offer
rewards to those who provide key information and relevant departments that have
performed well during the drive. The northeastern coastal city of Dalian has
announced that it will provide rewards of at least 3 thousand yuan, or 362 US
dollars to people who provide important information.
Meanwhile, China will step up efforts to pursue
corrupt officials who attempt to flee overseas, and to offer reduced sentences
to those who surrender to police.
Statistics show that up until the end of February,
over 160 have surrendered themselves to police, accounting for 40 percent of the
total number of officials arrested in the current campaign.
A report released by China's top anti-corruption
watchdog shows that at the end of last year, there were over 4000 fugitive
corrupt officials among their registered criminal cases, covering 30 Chinese
provinces and cities. The report also reveals that although more corrupt
officials have been arrested, the number of corrupt officials that have
absconded has continued to rise over the last two years, accounting for half of
all the corrupt officials at large.
(Source: CRIENGLISH.com) |