Deutsche Welle, 28 December 2013
More than
500 lawmakers have resigned and over 50 legislators sacked in a mass electoral
bribery case, according to state media. The scandal occurred in the southern
province of Hunan.
The 512
municipal officials resigned, were disqualified or dismissed after it was found
they had taken bribes from 56 members of the provincial assembly to elect them
to their posts.
State
television channel CCTV said on Twitter on Saturday that local officials had
dismissed the 56 representatives of the 763-member Hunan People's Congress,
after they were "elected by bribery."
It added
later that an initial investigation revealed the total amount of the bribes was
more than 110 million yuan (13.2 million euros, $18.1 million). The Xinhua news
agency said the money was used to swing the results of elections.
"The
number of people involved in the Henyang election case are many, the amount of
money is large, the substance serious, the effect pernicious; this is a serious
challenge to our People's Congresses system," Xinhua said. "It must
be seriously dealt with in accordance with the law."
Xinhua
named Tong Mingqian, the former Party chief of Hengyang, a city in Hunan
province, as being "directly responsible" for the election scandal.
In China,
municipal officials have the power to appoint representatives of their
provincial assembly, the local parliament which generally acts as a rubber
stamp for party decisions, rather than a forum for policy or debate.
Competition
to become lawmakers in some areas has opened the door to corruption, as holding
office can provide the opportunity to influence the decision-making process in
areas like business contracts.
Since
taking power last year, Chinese President Xi Jinping has led a sweeping
crackdown on corruption, promising to stamp out high-flying "tigers"
as well as low-ranking "flies" amid widespread disquiet over
government corruption.
China
reforms one-child policy, labor camps
Meanwhile
China's legislature formally approved on Saturday a relaxation of the country'sone-child policy.
The
standing committee of the National People's Congress passed a resolution that
will allow couples to have two children if either of the parents is an only
child, Xinhua said. Until now, only in cases in which both partners were only
children, were they allowed to have two children.
The change
is expected to allow around 10 million couples to have a second child if they
so choose. The one-child policy was introduced by Beijing more than three
decades ago in an effort to prevent overpopulation in what was already by far
the world's most populous nation.
Also on
Saturday, the committee approved the abolishment of re-education labor camps,
which were introduced in the late 1950s as a way of dealing with petty
offenders.
Both
changes had been agreed at a previous meeting of top Communist Party officials.
jr/ccp (Reuters, AFP)
Related Articles:

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.