The southern metropolis Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province, has stepped up its battle
against corruption, with authorities announcing the investigation
of several officials and businessmen.
According to a press release by Guangzhou's Party discipline
inspection commision, one of the men is 57-year-old Wang Shengjie,
former chairman of Guangzhou Guangzhong Enterprise Group.
The statement said he was stripped of his position of
vice-chairman and general manager of Guangzhou Electrical and
Mechanical Group (Holdings) Ltd last summer. He allegedly received
bribes of 1.31 million yuan (US$161,529) and illegal bonuses of
7.83 million yuan (US$965,475) from 1994 to 2002, while he chaired
the Guangzhou Guangzhong Enterprise Group.
He also allegedly misused 1 million yuan (US$123,305) of company
funds for his private business during the period.
Wang entered the company at the bottom level, and due to his
competence and integrity he quickly rose to the top. At the age of
35 he became one of the youngest managers of a state-owned
enterprise in the country.
However, according to the statement, when Wang's ambitions for
further promotion were frustrated he started to become corrupt.
He bid to become vice-mayor of Guangzhou but was rebuffed, and
from this point on he began to commit economic crimes and amass
personal wealth.
He will be tried later this month
Other corruption cases listed in the statement include:
Zhou Mengchang, former chairman of Zhujiang Industrial Group
Liao Chang, former deputy director of Guangzhou's Panyu District
Government
Liang Peizhang, former deputy director of Guangzhou Urban
Environment and Sanitation Bureau
Tan Dongfang, former deputy director of Guangzhou's Huadu
District Government
Ou Zhijiang, former general manager of Guangzhou Dongjian
Industrial Corp
No further details on these cases are available.
The statement said that the municipal inspection commission also
investigated another 15 division-level officials and corporate
executives in the January-June period.
The commission helped to recover economic losses of 32.8 million
yuan (US$4.04 million) for the state.
(China Daily July 14, 2006)