Buoyed by the success of the anti-corruption drive, China will
begin auditing medium-ranking officials from the beginning of next
year.
"Heads of prefectures and prefecture-level departments will be
subject to economic auditing from January 1 of 2005," said a
spokesman with the Economic Responsibility Auditing Department of
China's National Audit Office (CNAO).
In China, the administrative level proceeds from villages upward to
towns, counties, prefectures and prefecture-level cities, provinces
and province-level cities to the central government. So far, the
audits have mainly been of heads of counties and officials of lower
ranks.
In addition, China will audit military officers with the rank of
lieutenant colonel or higher who are in charge of army finances,
beginning next year, according to a regulation issued Wednesday by
the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA). The work will be done
by the military auditing system.
"Overall, the scope of auditing has been greatly expanded. Auditing
medium-rank officials, in particular, will be very effective in
curbing corruption at both the low and high levels," said Liu
Suhua, a researcher with the Research Office of Politics and Law of
the Party School of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central
Committee.
Liu acknowledged the expansion would increase the costs, but is
worthwhile because of the loopholes it will uncover.
A report on the auditing work in 2003, delivered by Auditor-general
Li Jinhua to the National People's Congress in June, revealed
misconduct in government departments and key state
enterprises.
Among them, 41 departments appropriated 1.42 billion yuan (US$171.1
million) using the money to build homes and offices and increase
subsidies to their staff.
A few officials responsible for the transgressions have been
indicted, some of which have been sentenced to prison terms.
The CNAO spokesman said the auditing departments maintained close
ties with prosecution and judicial departments. Law-breakers
uncovered by the auditing departments would be immediately
reported.
She said this cooperation would be further institutionalized and
strengthened.
(Xinhua News Agency November 27, 2004)