Deputy commander of China’s army among 5 stripped of lawmaker status amid corruption probe
Deng Zhiping, hailed after Vietnam border clashes in ’70s and ’80s, is latest to fall in President Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign
Deng Zhiping, a deputy commander of China’s army, has been stripped of his lawmaker status, becoming the latest to fall in Beijing’s anti-corruption drive into its military.
Before his promotion to the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) army force headquarters he served in the Western Theatre Command, which oversees the border with India.
Deng was among five lawmakers removed from the NPC, the country’s top legislature, on Friday. A separate announcement published by the Standing Committee of the NPC said he was suspected of “serious violation of laws and discipline”, a phrase that usually refers to corruption.
The other four officials had been the subject of public announcements about anti-corruption probes and dismissal from their original positions.
The military is among the most opaque of China’s state sectors, as appointments and investigations are usually made public long after they occur, compared with changes involving government and party officials.
Deng is the latest general to be disgraced amid President Xi Jinping’s far-reaching anti-corruption campaign into the military, which has accelerated in the past two years.