The Shanghai Prosecutors' Office investigated 428 cases of
corruption last year, director Wu Guanyu said in a report to the
Shanghai People's Congress (SPC) yesterday.
Wu didn't say how many people were charged with corruption or
punished in any way as a result of the investigations.
In 2004, Wu's office investigated 402 corruption cases.
In a separate report to the SPC, Teng Yilong, director of the
Shanghai Higher People's Court, said it ruled on 350
corruption-related cases last year, up from 331 cases in 2004. He
also didn't reveal how many people were found guilty.
"We strengthened our investigative power into corruption cases,"
Wu told more than 800 SPC delegates yesterday.
SPC delegates will break into groups to review the two reports
before voting on whether or not to accept them tomorrow.
Wu said his office has improved education from officials,
particularly those in charge of major urban projects such as the
Yangshan Deep-Water Port, metro lines, airports and railways, to
abide by the law.
His office also organized a series of lectures and training
courses for prosecutors to hone their skills in dealing with
corruption cases.
Wu said 345 of the 428 cases that his office investigated were
listed as severe cases of corruption, meaning they involved more
than 50,000 yuan (US$6,173) in bribes or 100,000 yuan in
embezzlement.
The Shanghai Higher People's Court noted in its report that it
heard 120,200 civil cases last year, a 10.1 percent increase from
2004.
(Shanghai Daily January 19, 2006)