China made public 20 severe cases of bribery in the construction
sector Thursday, a fresh step in its fighting against
corruption.
The 20 cases, made public by the Ministry of Construction, all
involved government employees in charge of urban planning, project
approval and evaluation of contractors' financial assessments.
Liu Zhifeng, Vice Minister of Construction, said most involved
government posts where power and resources were relatively
concentrated, and supervision was lax.
He cited Bi Yuxi, the former vice director of the Beijing
Communications Bureau who was sentenced to death with a reprieve
for embezzling state assets and taking bribes.
Liu said those offering bribes were seeking advantages in market
competition and illegal profits. "Bribes come in all forms. It
could be cash, gifts or masquerading as an information, service or
consulting charges, or school fees for their children," Liu
said.
From January to July, China's procuratorial organs dealt with
1,608 corruption cases in construction sector, about 26.31 percent
of the country's total.
"Because of the loopholes in rules and enforcement, the
construction sector has turned into a hotbed of commercial bribery.
The struggle is quite arduous," said Wang Jianming, director of the
Bureau against Graft and Bribery under the Supreme People's
Procuratorate.
China has intensified investigation of commercial bribery in
sectors such as construction, land transfers, property right deals,
medicine distribution and government procurement after Premier Wen
Jiabao promised to crack down on bribery in the year's Government
Work Report.
(Xinhua News Agency September 7, 2006)