The Chinese government has ordered a scrutiny of all the land
sales occurred from January 1, 2005 to December 31, 2007, to spot
and deal with unlawful behaviors in this field and to prevent and
curb corruption.
The Ministry of Supervision, Ministry of Land Resources,
Ministry of Construction, Ministry of Finance and the National
Audit Office jointly issued a circular saying that the massive
campaign will be launched soon and completed in six months.
The circular said the scrutiny will mainly focus on whether the
land which should be sold through public bidding was randomly
allocated by local governments, whether the land sale pricing was
reasonable, whether the revenue and expenditure of land transfer is
in line with laws and regulations and whether legally acquired land
was eventually used for purposes other than approved.
The circular requires supervisory bodies at all levels to
harshly deal with illegal behaviors, such as violation of land use
overall plan and overall city plan and the misdeed of transferring
land at low prices, and to vigorously discover the money-for-favor
deal behind land transfer cases. All the culprits shall be dealt
with according to administrative rules, party regulations and the
laws.
Land sale is regarded as one of the areas most prone to
corruption in China, where all the lands are owned by the state.
Land supply is also a critical part of the government's macro
control policies.
(Xinhua News Agency August 14, 2007)