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Thousands of officials punished in China's anti-corruption
purge
By James Conachy
1 February 2000
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Over the past weeks, Hong Kong and Guangdong-based newspapers
have documented the exposure of an elaborate smuggling operation
last year in the Special Economic Zone of Xiamen, located in China's
Fujian province directly across from Taiwan. Named Major Case
4-20, it is being touted as the largest corruption scandal since
the establishment of the Peoples Republic of China.
At the centre of the accusations is the Yuanhua or Fairwell
Group, a consortium of real estate and property development companies
owned by Lai Changxing, one of the richest entrepreneurs in Xiamen.
Before being closed down, with its assets confiscated, Fairwell
was in the process of constructing an 88-storey skyscraper and
a two tower, 30-storey international hotel. The company also owned
Xiamen's soccer team, a theme park that is one of Xiamen's major
tourist attractions and the exclusive Red Mansion resort that
was frequented by leading military officers and the local political
elite.
Utilising a network of contacts in Hong Kong, Taiwan and in
the Xiamen and Fujian governments, Lai Changxing organised the
shipment of goods such as oil and petroleum products, rubber,
semiconductors, cigarettes, mobile phones and luxury cars, avoiding
payment of import duties and tariffs. An estimated $US9.5 billion
of goods were smuggled into China over the course of several years,
unloaded at a Fairwell dock in the port of Xiamen and sold throughout
Fujian province at a lucrative profit. Police and customs officials
protected the racket's activities.
Since an official investigation began late last August, all
government and party officials in Fujian province have been banned
from leaving China. At least one trial has already taken place.
Those alleged to have been on Fairwell's payroll include Lan Fu,
Xiamen's vice-mayor in charge of foreign trading and security;
most of the leaders of the Xiamen Communist Party branch; the
deputy chief of the Fujian police; the chief of police in Fujian's
capital of Fuzhou; the heads of Xiamen's Customs, Security and
Telecommunications bureaus; and the Xiamen branch managers of
China's three largest banks. A vice-governor of Fujian may also
face allegations.
More than 150 other senior officials in Xiamen have been detained.
Hundreds of police, military and customs personnel have been questioned.
Also implicated is Xu Ganlu, a former head of security in Xiamen
who was promoted in 1996 to director of the Exit and Entry Administration,
one of the highest posts in the Ministry for Public Security.
He has been placed under house arrest.
On Wednesday, a spokesman for the Chinese government denied
reports by senior Washington Post journalist John Pomfret
that Fujian's largest state-owned import-export corporation, China
(Fujian) Trade Holdings, and its former head Lin Youfang, were
involved.
Lin Youfang is the wife of the Beijing Communist party boss
Jia Qinglin, one of the most powerful political figures in China.
Before moving to Beijing in 1997 he was Communist party secretary
in Fujian.
He sits on the 22-member Politbureau, is a close confidante
of President Jiang Zemin and opened the PRC's 50th anniversary
celebration last October 1. Last Thursday, Lin Youfang made an
unprecedented appearance on state television to prove she was
not under arrest and deny any involvement in the Xiamen scandal.
The Chinese government has also denied allegations of involvement
by relatives of General Liu Huaqing, a former Politbureau member
and currently the vice-chairman of the powerful Central Military
Commission.
According to the most recent information in the Guangzhou
Daily, some 400 anti-graft police, headed by China's top anti-corruption
prosecutor Liu Liying, are investigating the case. The newspaper
reported on January 22 that "as investigators dig deeper
and deeper, they find not only more people involved but people
at a higher level of government". The investigation has extended
from Xiamen to Fuzhou and another major city, Zhangzhou.
The lurid details about the goings-on in Xiamen put flesh and
blood on a staggering statistic released on January 12 by Wei
Jianxing, the head of the Chinese regime's Central Commission
for Discipline Inspection. In the last 12 months over 130,000
cases of official corruption have been investigated and more than
132,000 government and Communist party officials punished, including
17 ministers.
The crackdown was signaled in December 1998 with the beginning
of "The Three Stresses" campaign, consisting of the
upholding of state ideology or one-party rule; obedience to the
central government; and combating corruption. Extended across
the country last June, the campaign demanded that all government
officials and managers of state-owned firms attend a series of
day-long criticism sessions in which lower functionaries were
encouraged to denounce the conduct of their superiors.
The result of the "Three Stresses" was a dramatic
intensification in corruption investigations in the second half
of 1999. China's public prosecutors office had reported that in
the first half of the year it had investigated corruption allegations
against 1,000 Communist party and government officials, 3,466
judiciary officials, 1,769 financial officials and 7,886 managers
of state-owned enterprisesa total of around 14,000 individuals.
As well as Fujian, crackdowns have taken place in the coastal
provinces of Guangdong, Hainan, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Shandong, Liaoning
and the Beijing and Shanghai municipalitiesthat is, in most
of China's key economic regions. As well as action against smuggling
rings and bribe-taking by government officials, national campaigns
were conducted last year against foreign exchange fraud, the manipulation
of prices, abuse of police power, interference by local authorities
in the courts and the misuse of public construction funds. As
a result, thousands of provincial and city government officials
have been purged.
The purge within the government is being directed from the
highest level. President Jiang Zemin initiated the "Three
Stresses" campaign and Premier Zhu Rongji has made numerous
speeches denouncing corruption as an obstacle to the development
of China's economy and entry into the World Trade Organisation.
Last August, the national auditor general brought down a report
that declared $US14.2 billion in taxation revenueover 20
percent of the budgethad been misappropriated by government
officials and that action had to be taken to recover it.
With the New Year, there is every sign the campaign is being
escalated. The main Communist Party organ, the Peoples Daily,
featured a four-part series from January 10-14 on the struggle
for "clean government," which included a litany of abuses
by officials and the actions against it by the central authorities.
At a meeting of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection
on January 12-14, unit head Wei Jianxing unveiled new anti-corruption
laws banning government officials accepting gifts or employing
members of their family within areas under their administration.
He stated: "In a market economy officials need to be conscious
of the separation between public and private affairs".
Addressing the meeting on January 14, Jiang Zemin declared:
"All party members should keep a clear mind about this: there
is danger ahead if party control and discipline are slack".
He described the key reason for corruption as "party organisation
and leadership is lax in a great number of regions and units".
He stated that: "No matter who it is, no matter how high
the post, those who deserve punishment will be punished... There
will be absolutely no leniency".
Corruption and capitalism
Describing the initial restoration of capitalism in his valuable
work The Deng Xiaoping Era, author Maurice Meisner noted:
"By the mid-1980s Deng Xiaoping's much celebrated market
reforms had produced a capitalist economy that revolved around
the use of political power for personal profit. That it was an
economic system based on official corruption was hardly a secret
in Chinese society".
With the legitimisation of private property, by the end of
the 1980s entire networks of regional and local bureaucratic patronage
emerged, especially in the eastern coastal regions that were attracting
substantial foreign direct investment. What has been revealed
about the Xiamen Special Economic Zone is by no means an isolated
occurrence. The ability to make profit in China has in large measure
depended upon the necessary political connections or quanxi.
A characteristic shared by many of China's private entrepreneurs
is that they, or their fathers, were leading Stalinist officials
who acquired their initial private wealth through the plunder
of state assets.
Jiang's remarks about "danger ahead" points to what
is without question a consideration in the corruption purge: the
sensitivity of the Beijing regime to the widespread alienation
among the working class and peasant masses. The all-pervasive
corruption and gross social inequality is a major social grievance
among the Chinese working people. It was one of the central causes
of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and one of the appeals of
the banned Falun Gong movement to ordinary people has been its
denunciations of the loss of morality in societyan indirect
criticism of the regime.
Social tensions are now far more explosive than 11 years ago.
Last year alone some 60,000 protests took place over unpaid wages
and pensions, excessive taxation and other official abuses of
authority. In a January 24 report by the Hong Kong Standard,
the director of Public Security in Guangdong, Chen Shaoji, described
massive protests across the province last year, triggered by widespread
bank failures and a series of related corruption scandals. He
described 1999 as "the most difficult period since we implemented
the open-door policy [in 1979]".
Beijing is also using the corruption scandals to strengthen
its control over the regions. With the international experiences
of the disintegration of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union in mind,
Beijing has sought to reverse the relative regional autonomy from
the central government that developed in the 1990s and end the
existence of local power bases.
In 1998 the Peoples Liberation Army was ordered to divest itself
of its considerable and highly regionalised business activities.
In the same year the government of Guangdong was almost totally
purged and replaced with figures selected by Beijing. One aspect
of the current corruption purge, as in the case of the Falun Gong
crackdown, is the central government's assertion of control over
the provinces and state apparatus and the elimination of any potential
rival.
The purpose of the crackdown on corruption, however, goes beyond
an attempt to forestall social discontent and to maintain a strong
central government. Economic factors are also in play. One of
most significant social changes in China is that, two decades
after the first free market reforms, a definable class of capitalists
has emerged that is no longer dependent upon bureaucratic position
for its accumulation of wealth. It now holds ownership of considerable
productive and financial capital in the form of property, shares
and private businesses.
Weighed against the local networks of politically-sponsored
smugglers, black marketers and extortionists, are the interests
of China's major domestic companies. While still euphemistically
called state-owned enterprises, they are in fact share-listed
and traded daily on the Shanghai, Shenzhen and Hong Kong stock
markets. Eight of them rank in the Fortune magazine 500
largest corporations in the world and Chinese oil and steel companies
are preparing to list on Wall Street. Also growing rapidly in
economic and political clout are the thousands of privately owned
companies that now have equal legal status to state-owned companies
and can gain export-import licenses.
Oil provides one example of the conflict of interests. It is
estimated that 42 million barrels of oil were smuggled into China
during 1998 and sold at lower prices than those charged by the
dominant oil corporations, under conditions of economic deflation
and falling corporate profits. Similar situations could be cited
for virtually all commodities. The smuggling crackdown resulted
in government revenue from import duties increasing by 78 percent
in 1999 and unquestionably contributed to the rise in profitability
for numbers of Chinese companies.
Pressure to control the corruption of government officials
is also coming from transnational corporations and Western governments.
With China's impending entry into the World Trade Organisation
and the slashing of tariffs and other trade barriers, foreign
capital will be able to operate with unprecedented freedom in
the domestic economy. As with the attack on "crony capitalism"
in other parts of Asia, transnational companies will not tolerate
the obstacles placed in their way by having to pay-off tier after
tier of bureaucracy to get their products into the market.
The national regime in Beijing is attempting a transition from
being the highest level of a vast Stalinist bureaucratic stratum
into being the efficient instrument of a Chinese capitalist class
and international investors. In the process, it is being forced
to undermine layers of the bureaucracy beneath it and millions
of officials are losing access to long-held privileges, generating
frictions and tensions.
See Also:
Falun Gong members
go on trial in China
[19 November 1999]
Fiftieth anniversary
of the Peoples Republic of China: a celebration of nationalism
and the market
[13 October 1999]
The Falun Gong crackdown:
a crisis in China's corridors of power
[3 August 1999]
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