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China’s procuratorate to put rural officials under corruption spotlight
BEIJING—China’s procuratorate
authority is to intensify its efforts to watch over government officials
in the rural areas, in case their duty dereliction and power abuse may
lead to violation of farmers’ interests.
The country’s procuratorate organs will strengthen its efforts to
investigate and settle criminal cases caused by officials’ duty
dereliction and power abuse, officials with the Supreme People’s
Procuratorate told a press conference here on Thursday.
Efforts will focus on juicy areas such as construction and government
subsidy distribution, officials say. The move came amid the
procuratorate’s efforts to safeguard the millions of farmers’ interests,
improve their livelihood and promote the battle against corruption in
the rural areas, said Wang Zhenchuan, deputy procurator-general of the
Supreme People’s Procuratorate, at the press conference.
The eight areas are infrastructure building such as road construction,
energy grids upgrading; government subsidy distribution; environment
conservation investment; public welfare projects such as fund for
medicare, social security and primary education; land acquisition and
compensation; public welfare donations such as fund for disaster relief,
migration; reform projects of land and forest property; leadership
election below township levels.
In China, farmers often complain about violation of rightful interests
and receiving less compensation than they deserve.
A work report delivered by Chinese procurator-general Jia Chunwang in
March said prosecutors investigated more than 209,000 officials from
2002 to 2007, down 13.2 percent from the previous five years, in almost
180,000 cases of embezzlement, bribery, dereliction of duty and rights
violation, down 9.9 percent. But the number of convicted rose 30.7
percent to almost 117,000.—Xinhua |