Anti-graft officials vow protection of whistle-blowers from retaliation
Officials with China's top anti-graft authority expressed firm opposition on Tuesday to the detention of petitioners.
Authorities are not allowed to detain petitioners at any level of petition offices and at public venues, said Zhang Shaolong, deputy director of the office of letters and calls of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Communist Party of China.
It is a legal channel for petitioners to submit whistle-blowing materials face to face to the anti-graft authorities, and the petitioners should receive a warm welcome from anti-corruption agencies, he said.
Zhang made the remarks on Tuesday during an online interview with two other anti-graft officials from the commission.
Under the administrative mechanism in most places, the leading officials will not get promoted if too many petitioners appeal to higher authorities.
Many corrupt officials were exposed by online posts, Zhang said, adding that some inaccurate online information has also made the investigations of corrupt officials difficult.
Among all the cases investigated by the commission last year, about 41.8 percent of the clues were collected from the public whistle-blowers through online reports, letters and calls, Zhang said.
Guo Hongliang, Zhang's colleague who also attended the online interview, said that the commission has received 301,000 online whistle-blowing reports from 2008 to 2012.
The commission established 12388.gov.cn, its online whistle-blowing website, in October 2009, and the Internet has become one of the most important channels for the commission to collect information, he said.
Deng Jixun, another colleague of Zhang who attended the interview, said that real-name whistle-blowing activities should be encouraged to promote the efficiency of anti-corruption work.
The anti-graft authorities should protect real-name whistle-blowers from being victims of retaliation, he said.
Zhang acknowledged that some officials try to prevent people from petitioning to higher levels of government, and these officials' behavior should be firmly opposed.
A report in People's Daily revealed that many petitioners had been detained by the government of Hai'an county in Jiangsu province since March when they tried to visit the anti-graft officials from an inspection team sent by the provincial government.
Yang Huilian, a woman who went to the anti-graft officials' hotel to petition on March 28, was dragged downstairs from the third floor by four men, forced into a car, and taken to the county government, the report said.
Detaining petitioners has become common in many places, and it has become the top priority for many government agencies to detain those who went to Beijing to petition, said Wang Yukai, a professor of administrative research at the Chinese Academy of Governance.
Even gangsters have profited by collaborating with government officials to detain petitioners, he said.
In February, 10 people were sentenced for illegally detaining four petitioners who came from Henan province to Beijing in April 2012.
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