HANGZHOU, Oct. 22 (Xinhua) -- A party official in east China's Zhejiang
Province was sacked after overstaying more than 40 days in France and refusing
to come back, according to the Zhejiang Provincial Committee of the Communist
Party of China (CPC).
Yang Xianghong, 53, former secretary of the Lucheng District Committee of
the CPC, in Wenzhou City, was accused of "damaging the Party's image and ruining
the country's reputation". His wrongdoing also infringed on China's law on
public servants and the Party's disciplines, an official with the provincial CPC
committee said.
Yang departed on Sept. 19 on a 12-day official tour to Europe. But he left
the delegation before the return trip, saying he was suffering serious back
illness which prevented him from taking long trip by air. The other members
returned from Paris on Sept. 29 as scheduled.
The provincial Party committee ordered the Wenzhou municipal Party
committee to persuade Yang to receive treatment at home.
The city authorities sent a group of two officials and a doctor to Paris on
Oct. 23 in the hope of bringing him back. However, the group's only means of
contact with Yang was by text message because his mobile phone was turned off.
Yang later called the group leader four times, saying that he would come
back when he recovered but refused to reveal where he was. He also declined to
set up meetings with the group.
The group lost hope in Yang and returned on Tuesday.
The official did not reveal any further details.
Yang was promoted last year to be a standing committee member of the
Wenzhou municipal CPC committee, while still holding his district chief job.
According to an earlier report of Xinhua, Yang had surgery in April 2007 on
his recurring back pain. He had confided to some of his peers over the last year
that he wanted to step down because of "bad health and there were some people
against him."