700 officials punished by green teams
Updated: 2016-08-04 02:01
By ZHENG JINRAN(China Daily)
|
|||||||||
Up to 700 officials in eight provinces and autonomous regions have been punished by central government inspectors in an unprecedentedly tough move to strengthen the nation's environmental supervision.
In what People's Daily described as an "accountability storm" for environmental laws and rules, the inspectors have exposed about 4,000 offenses including cases of dereliction of duty since they were commissioned in mid-July.
The first areas covered by the inspections are Heilongjiang, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Henan and Yunnan provinces, and the Inner Mongolia, Guangxi Zhuang and Ningxia Hui autonomous regions. The inspections still have two weeks to run.
Environmental experts have been quick to praise the central government's swift and tough action in dealing with local officials responsible for illegal pollution discharges.
One of the eight provincial regions where tough punishment was handed out was Guangxi, which punished 112 officials. Among them, 37 at city and county level were found to have been responsible for pollution caused by illegal quarrying at a nationally known scenic area on the Lijiang River in Guilin.
Zhang Benxing, a 73-year-old resident of Xiangshan district in Guilin, said, "The quarry near my village has been worked for more than 20 years, generating heavy dust all the time, and I think it caused my respiratory disease."
He added that many houses near the quarry have cracks due to continuous blasting at the quarry.
The Henan provincial government said in a statement, "The cases transferred by the central-level inspectors will go immediately to the governments involved. ... They will be required to investigate them straightaway."
Henan, which completed the investigation of 310 cases in two weeks, had punished 216 government officials by Saturday last week based on Party rules and administrative regulations.
Ma Yong, an environmental researcher at a Supreme People's Court law center, praised the large number of cases exposed and the tougher punishment for officials.
"It shows the central government has been striving to reduce pollution and has seen some success."
China has introduced laws and regulations stipulating that key leaders should play the major role in environmental protection, but the implementation of these has not been so good, Ma said.
Chang Jiwen, deputy director of the Institute for Resources and Environment Policies at the State Council Development Research Center, agreed that progress has been made with the number of cases exposed.
But he suggested that the central inspection teams should focus more on provincial and city-level governments and start investigating them.
This year, central inspectors plan to investigate 14 provincial regions, according to the National Environmental Protection Inspection Office.
Similar to the inspections ordered by the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection to check for cases of official corruption, the central government has started to send the high-level inspection teams to look for environmental offenses.
Cracking down
Results to date of the monthlong inspection of eight provinces and autonomous regions:
•NingxiaHui autonomous region
By July 31, 224 cases reported, 53 officials summoned, another 29 held accountable, two detained.
• Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region
By Aug 1, 879 cases reported, 112 officials held accountable
• InnerMongolia autonomous region
By July 30, 773 cases reported, 81 officials summoned, another 104 held accountable, 40 detained.
• Jiangxi province
By July 28, 333 cases reported, at least eight officials summoned,more than 21 held accountable.
• Jiangsu province
By July 24, 522 cases reported, eight officials summoned, another 13 held accountable, 14 etained.
• Yunnan province
By July 30, 432 cases reported, 35 officials held accountable.
•Henan province
By July 30, at least 310 cases reported, 216 officials punished.
•Heilongjiang province
By July 30, 464 cases reported, 32 officials held accountable.
Zhang Li contributed to this story.
- Government, fishermen protect environment of islands and sea
- Targeted Policies Need to Be Implemented to Enhance Public’s Perception of the Quality of Ecological Environment ——Based on the 2015 Survey of 12714 Families in Eight Provinces(No.88, 2016)
- Environment Regulation System Reform during the 13th Five-Year Plan Period: Objective, Measures and Policy Options(No.32, 2016)
- SPC head promotes environment judiciary
- New lab will explore South China Sea resources
- 40 telecom fraud suspects returned to China from Kenya
- Cheery promotional video introduces G20 city Hangzhou to Europe
- Researchers claim intelligence services targeted Chinese airline
- Tunnel-bus production center faces delays
- Chinese Valentine's Day Special: Love conquers everything
- Nepal's newly elected PM takes oath
- Texas gun law worries incoming students
- China vows to deepen economic, trade cooperation with ASEAN
- Fire guts Emirates jet after hard landing; 1 firefighter dies
- Egypt's Nobel-laureate scientist dies of illness in US
- THAAD muscle flexing unmasks anxiety over declining hegemony
- Top swimmer Sun Yang makes sweet revenge
- Lin Yue and Chen Aisen win Olympic gold medal
- Artist creates mini-mes for loving couples at Qixi festival
- Skyscraper demolished outside ancient city
- Chinese Valentine: Love conquers everything
- Ace swimmers make record-breaking splash in Rio
- Chinese weightlifter Long smashes world record
- China wins first diving gold of Rio Games
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Anti-graft campaign targets poverty relief |
Cherry blossom signal arrival of spring |
In pictures: Destroying fake and shoddy products |
China's southernmost city to plant 500,000 trees |
Cavers make rare finds in Guangxi expedition |
Cutting hair for Longtaitou Festival |
Today's Top News
US launches airstrikes against IS targets in Libya's Sirte
Ministry slams US-Korean THAAD deployment
Two police officers shot at protest in Dallas
Abe's blame game reveals his policies failing to get results
Ending wildlife trafficking must be policy priority in Asia
Effects of supply-side reform take time to be seen
Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi to meet Kerry
Chinese stocks surge on back of MSCI rumors
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |