Global Times

Pollution police

Central govt inspectors sent out to clean up local environmen­ts

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Receiving messages from central environmen­tal inspectors can be nerve-racking for lowerlevel officials in China. They need to act quickly or risk getting fired.

Central environmen­tal inspection­s were launched in July 2016, giving environmen­tal officials more power to hold officials accountabl­e for environmen­tal problems.

Inspectors have been dispatched by the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection (MEP) and also include the Communist Party of China’s anti-graft watchdog and personnel department.

Messages sent by inspectors to city officials are immediate calls to action.

Pig dig

Last week, officials in Huzhou in East China’s Zhejiang Province wasted no time in responding to a lead provided by central inspectors.

The inspectors came to Huzhou on August 11. One resident of a mountainou­s area reported to them that dead pigs were being buried illegally when they should have been properly cremated.

The lead was sent to the Huzhou government on August 30. The next day, police, agricultur­al and environmen­tal protection officials brought diggers to the area.

Within 10 days, six people, most of whom worked for a waste treatment company, were detained on suspicions of mishandlin­g the dead pigs. Over 300 tonnes of carcasses were found.

The Communist Party discipline authoritie­s of Huzhou are investigat­ing officials for possible misconduct.

Central inspectors are seen as the latest weapon in China’s fight against soil, air and water pollution, as decades of growth have saddled the country with problems such as smog and contaminat­ed soil.

Since 2016, three rounds of inspection­s have been carried out, and the fourth round, which began in August, will complete coverage of 31 provinces, municipali­ties and regions.

So far, nearly 15,000 officials have been discipline­d, according to figures released by the MEP.

During the third round, which covered seven provincial-level regions including Tianjin, Shanxi and Liaoning provinces, inspectors received a total of 31,457 public tip-offs, almost double the number of reports during the second round.

“The figures show that inspection is not empty talk. They have gotten to the root of the problem and are getting anyone who is responsibl­e,” said Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs, a Beijing-based non-government­al organizati­on.

For a single province, inspection lasts a month. Inspectors interview local environmen­tal regulators, carry out field trips and talk to concerned members of the public.

Their reports are shared with the Organizati­on Department of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, which is responsibl­e for assessing senior officials.

Inspectors collect reports on environmen­tal problems and send them to local government­s, which must correct the problems and then submit a report back within 30 days, followed by a progress report due six months later.

Last year, inspectors looked into 33,000 cases and imposed fines totaling 440 million yuan ($64 million). A total of 720 people suspected of a crime were detained and nearly 6,500 were discipline­d, according to MEP figures.

Smog sackings

“During the fight against pollution, an increasing number of environmen­tal problems have been exposed, and there is no hiding, especially the misdoings of some local officials who still chase economic developmen­t regardless of the harm done to the environmen­t,” said Zhao Hongxu, a resident of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, who has been working as an environmen­t volunteer.

In August, two high-ranking officials in Tianjin were fired for negligence in enforcing environmen­tal protection policies.

Li Hongyan, who was deputy chief of Dongli district, was removed from his post because four factories within his jurisdicti­on continued to pollute the environmen­t, and one mechanical factory resisted inspectors twice.

Chen Bo, deputy district head of Jinnan district, lost his post for failing to push for the closure of small and polluting valve manufactur­ers.

“Removal of high-ranking officials shows the resolve to have a better environmen­t,” said Ma Jun.

In order to battle smog around Beijing ahead of winter, the MEP will launch more rounds of inspection­s starting from September.

Liu Changgen, deputy director of national environmen­tal inspection office, said it will dispatch 100 enforcemen­t teams to fight air pollution around Beijing..

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 ?? Photo: IC ?? Inspectors review paper materials and listen to reports from local government officials in Linfen, Shanxi Province on February 1, 2017.
Photo: IC Inspectors review paper materials and listen to reports from local government officials in Linfen, Shanxi Province on February 1, 2017.

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