Xi, who is
preparing for a major Communist Party leadership conference later this
month, has made an anti-graft campaign targeting “tigers and flies”,
both high and low ranking officials, a core policy priority during his
five-year term.
China is preparing for the 19th
Congress later this month, a twice-a-decade leadership event where Xi
is expected to consolidate power and promote his policy positions.
Those
punished for graft since 2013 include 648,000 village-level officials
and most crimes were related to small scale corruption, said the Central
Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) on Sunday.
While
much of the country’s anti-graft drive has targeted lower ranking
village and county officials, several high-ranking figures have been
taken down.
In August the head of the
anti-graft committee for China’s Ministry of Finance was himself put
under investigation for suspected graft.
In
September a senior military officer who sits on China’s powerful Central
Military Commission, overseen by Xi, was detained and questioned over
corruption-related offences, Reuters reported.
The
CCDI said 155,000 country-level party bureaux have set up corruption
policing mechanisms as of August, representing 94.8 percent of total
bureaus.







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