BEIJING: China pledged to banish abuse in graft investigations and urged foreign diplomats to help “weave a cooperative network against corruption”, as it tries to build international support for President Xi Jinping’s four-year war on graft.
Xi has vowed to fight deep-rooted graft at all levels of the ruling Communist Party until officials “dare not, cannot and don’t want to” be corrupt, and has warned that failure to stamp out the rot could threaten the party’s future.
China has taken the battle global, publishing a list of the 100 most-wanted corruption suspects who have fled abroad to countries such as the United States, Canada and Australia, often taking their wealth with them.
Authorities have said they clawed back 2.3 billion yuan (US$334 million) in graft proceeds from more than 70 countries and regions in the first 11 months of 2016.
But China has struggled to win full cooperation in tracking and repatriating such fugitives, with foreign countries blaming an under-developed legal system, and concern about rights abuses, for their reluctance to sign extradition treaties.
In an unusual step, Wu Yuliang, deputy head of the top graft watchdog, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), briefed representatives of 113 diplomatic missions and 13 international bodies on Thursday about efforts to fight graft, the official Xinhua News Agency said.