China Daily (Hong Kong)

No quota for big ‘tigers’ netted in anti-corruption campaign

- THE OFFICIAL SITE OF THE PEOPLE’S LIBERATION ARMY People’s Daily, via WeChat, April 26 cjn.cn, April 27 Zhao Jian, a Beijing-based lawyer, April 28

announced on April 26 that three more senior military officers are under investigat­ion, bringing the total number of fallen “tigers” (senior corrupt officials) to 102. Some media outlets have even released a chart of “100 tigers” giving details of who they are. Comments:

A careful look at the list of “tigers” will show that about one-third come from the military, of which about half held key positions in logistics department­s or provincial military commands. These department­s hold a lot of power, yet there is hardly any supervisio­n against them. The fall of so many “tigers” in the military indicates rampant corruption, as well as the firm determinat­ion of the central leadership to root it out.

A good harvest does not mean a farmer will stop working hard. For the same reason, having caged so many “tigers” does not mean the top leadership will stop hunting more corrupt senior officials. Never has any quota been set on the number of “tigers” to be caught. Top Party disciplina­ry chief Wang Qis- han has vowed to continue the fight against corrupt officials to the end, and corrupt officials need to give up the illusion that the anti-corruption campaign is gong to ease.

The hunting down of so many corrupt officials is a victory for the top leadership and the people. But people want the disciplina­ry and prosecutor­ial department­s to swat more flies (low-level corrupt officials) that directly interact with ordinary people in their daily work, because corruption among them causes more direct harm to people’s interests and hurts ordinary people. I hope one day the leadership will be able to swat all the flies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China