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‘Punishment better than words’: China’s top graft-buster vows no let-up in hunt for corrupt ‘tigers’

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Documents and a court picture of Jiang Qing, wife of Mao Zedong, are displayed at the new Chinese Court Museum, which also displays items relating to recent corruption trials. Photo: Simon Song

The Communist Party’s discipline chief Wang Qishan vowed yesterday there would be no let-up in the far-reaching anti-graft campaign in 2016.

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“Punishment works better than words,” Wang, head of the graft-busting Central Commission of Discipline Inspection, told a preparatory meeting for an upcoming CCDI conference involving provincial party leaders.

“We will let the public see and enjoy our achievement fighting corruption,” he said. “The strength of our anti-corruption efforts will not be lessened.”

The CCDI will hold its sixth plenary session in Beijing next Tuesday to Thursday to map out its direction for the coming months.

The anti-graft campaign did not only target “a few corrupt people” but was an important element in cleaning up the party, Wang added.

READ MORE - Close aide to China’s President Xi Jinping named Beijing’s anti-graft chief

President Xi Jinping (習近平) launched the massive anti-corruption campaign after coming to power more than three years ago. Famously, he has said the CCDI would be “striking tigers and flies at the same time” – a reference to both high-ranking corrupt officials, and those more lowly.

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