China would take tough measures to severely punish academic
falsifications, said Chinese Minister Xu Guanhua of Science and
Technology on the sidelines of the ongoing annual session of the
10th National People's Congress.
"We will severely deal with any case of academic falsification
whenever it is discovered," Xu said, after attending a panel
discussion held by the delegation group of east China's Jiangsu
Province.
China is drafting and improving relevant policies and
regulations regarding scientific and technological evaluation and
rewarding in order to avoid the "scandal of Hwang Woo-suk" of the
Republic of Korea (ROK).
The recent scandal surrounding ROK stem cell scientist Hwang
Woo-suk has rocked China's academic community, and added fuel to a
fierce debate over the country's so-called science police with Fang
Zhouzi being the most famous one.
Fang runs the New Threads website exposing scientific plagiarism
and pseudoscience -- research that appears scientific but does not
follow the scientific method.
According to agenda of the annual session, Xu will, together
with other senior government officials, give a news conference on
building an innovation-oriented country on March 10 in Beijing.
To encourage science and technology innovations, China has
formulated and published policies and measures totaling 60
items.
(Xinhua News Agency March 7, 2006)