'Tiger' hunt shows Party is resolved to clean house
Barely two days after the Communist Party of China's top disciplinary body announced the investigation of Lu Wei, former deputy chief of the Party's Publicity Department, Zhang Yang, a former member of the Central Military Commission, who was also under investigation, committed suicide on Thursday.
Lu, the first high-level official, or "tiger", brought down by the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection after the Party's 19th National Congress, is under investigation for what are described as serious violations of disciplinary protocols.
Zhang was being investigated for his connections with the disgraced former CMC vice-chairmen Guo Boxiong and Xu Caihou, as well as offering and accepting bribes and holding a huge amount of assets whose origin was unclear, in addition to other discipline violations.
The investigations of Lu, who was also head of the Cyberspace Administration of China, and Zhang, who was also the former head of the military's Political Work Department, have come as timely reassurance that the graft-busters are not easing up on their endeavors and, as CPC General Secretary Xi Jinping has vowed, there are no no-go zones.
With the central leadership's demonstrated resolve to make the fight against corruption never ending and a lasting political legacy, it is evident that the graft-busters are determined to leave no stone unturned.
But while pursuing those who seek to escape with impunity for their wrongdoings, it is important at the same time to mend the loose or broken fences that have allowed corruption to breed and spread in the manner it has.
The CPC has made impressive progress in this regard by installing new anti-graft protocols and institutionalizing proven remedies, especially over the past five years. More will be achieved as the anti-graft efforts become more systematic.
A comprehensive review of existing corruption-prevention mechanisms and their subsequent overhaul, such as the establishment of a national supervisory commission system, and the adoption of national anti-corruption legislation, are indispensable for that to happen.
As Xi said in his speech at the 19th CPC National Congress, it takes good blacksmith to make good steel. The efforts to establish the clean, honest, upright working style Xi envisions, and which people are longing for, have to go hand in hand with efforts to rid the People's Liberation Army of the pernicious influence of corruption in order to make it fit for purpose.
Only through strengthening deterrence, creating a cage of institutions, and maintaining constant vigilance against corruption will the military be ready to meet the demands of the day and the political environment be clean and free of corruption.
Today's Top News
- APEC leaders should join hands to ensure another 'golden 30 years' for the region
- Xi replies to friendly personages in Brazil
- CIIE showcases opportunities in, openness of Chinese market
- Joint climate action key to hunger-free world
- 56 lost Chinese cultural relics returned from Italy
- China, Indonesia bolster ties
Most Viewed
- Exotic Qing court painting: Western brushstrokes depicting Eastern charm
- Ten photos from across China: Nov 1
- 24 Solar Terms: 8 things you may not know about Start of Winter
- China a bright spot of economic openness
- Xi calls for stable, healthy Sino-US ties