The apology made by a top city official to the public heralds
the first step towards setting up an accountability system, says a
signed article in People's Daily. An excerpt follows:
At the latest session of the municipal people's congress last
weekend, the mayor of Chaohu, east China's
Anhui Province, extended a deep apology to the public and the
deputies of people's congress for failure to achieve some of the
set government goals.
This has been widely considered a good start in the process of
building a responsible and accountable government.
Nationwide, it is not the only case of a leading government
official standing up and apologizing to the public for poor work.
And some have to resign as the price they pay for their bad
decision-making.
All this is the inspiring result of the country's construction
of democracy and the legal system.
Apologies and similar actions demonstrate that the construction
of a responsible government is no longer just a verbal promise, and
the government accountability mechanism is now functioning.
Public apology by government officials, however, is only the
first step in the building of a sound accountability system. Any
apology will be seriously discounted if no investigative and
punitive measures follow.
As far as the Chaohu case is concerned, the public has not been
provided with any information on why those government goals were
not attained, which departments should be held responsible. and
what punishments should be issued.
The key to forging a responsible and credible government lies in
clarifying the duties of every government department and official,
and being fair and strict in meting out rewards and
punishments.
(China Daily February 22, 2006)