China auditors to probe 08' Games preparations (Reuters) Updated: 2005-12-27 19:33
China's state auditors will next year probe construction schemes being
readied for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Xinhua news agency said, in a bid
to stem possible corruption.
The audit could shine unprecedented light on the Beijing Olympic
organizing committee which is overseeing the massive project of preparing the
Chinese capital for the Games.
"The Beijing Olympic organizing committee's income and expenses and the
competition venue construction situation" would be among the five main audit
subjects in 2006, Xinhua cited National Audit Office director Li Jinhua as
saying on Monday.
Another project to come under the spotlight would be the Three Gorges Dam,
the world's largest hydroelectric power scheme, Xinhua said.
Audits for the first 11 months of this year uncovered misappropriation of 290
billion yuan ($36 billion) of government funds, officials said this week.
Organizers have scaled back plans for some Games venues, including scrapping
a retractable roof for the showcase "bird's nest" National Stadium, but the
budget for venue construction still stands at around $2 billion.
By 2008, Beijing expects to have spent a total of nearly $40 billion on the
Olympics, most of which will go to building new roads and subway lines and
improving the city's power grid and environment.
Next year's audit checks will not be the first time China's sports world has
come under scrutiny.
In September, the Audit Office said the General Administration of Sport
collected 24 million yuan in sponsorship funds which were never paid out.
Its 2004 report revealed that between 1999 and 2003, the state sports
administration had "misused" 131 million yuan of funds from China's National
Olympic Committee, most of which went to building housing for administration
staff.
($1=8.073 Yuan)
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