China’s top graft-buster says it detained hundreds of SOE officials in first half of 2023
- Number of state-owned enterprises investigated ‘significantly increased’ from last year, CCDI says
- Anti-corruption agency has targeted the sector after it was listed as a priority in January
The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said the number of SOEs placed under investigation had “increased significantly” compared with the same period last year, but it did not give a figure for 2022.
The CCDI also said it had achieved “multiple breakthroughs” in state-owned assets supervision and the energy, electricity, car and corporate finance sectors.
In March, the CCDI began inspections of 30 of the country’s biggest SOEs directly managed by the state, including China National Nuclear Corporation, China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, China Rongtong Asset Management Group, China National Petroleum Corporation, and China Three Gorges Corporation.
In Thursday’s report, the CCDI said its inspectors had focused on areas vulnerable to corruption such as big infrastructure projects, procurement, mergers and acquisitions, and mixed-ownership reforms of SOEs.