Currently, officials can defend themselves from accusations of receiving bribes by saying money or other goods received, like luxury watches or bags, were just a present from a friend, the official China Daily reported.
It is only considered a crime if a link can be made to some sort of abuse of power, it said.
President Xi Jinping has launched a sweeping campaign against deep-seated graft since assuming office last year, warning, like others before him, that the Communist Party’s very survival is at stake.
Xi has vowed to take down high-flying “tigers” as well as lowly “flies” in an anti-graft campaign that has felled Zhou Yongkang, once the powerful domestic security tsar, as well as Jiang Jiemin, the former top regulator of state-owned firms.
The gift rules will probably be changed at a regular meeting of the National People’s Congress opening on Oct. 27, the newspaper said.
“The draft is likely to deem that accepting gifts or money of a considerable amount would be punishable for all government officials,” it added.
“The draft proposal will discuss the possibility of handing down punishment to public servants for accepting goods or money of a certain amount without a direct link to misconduct.”
The amendment is almost certain to be approved as state media generally does not flag such changes if they are not going to be passed.
Under the present system, gifts are meant to be handed over to the government within a month of being received, and some provinces have even set up special bank accounts to handle such money, the newspaper said. – Reuters
Leave a Comment