National Supervisory Commission rectifies over 700 landscaping vanity projects in China: report
The National Supervisory Commission (NSC) carried out in-depth probes into vanity projects, leading to the rectification or suspension of over 700 "unnecessary landscaping" projects, said a report shared during the most recent session of the National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee, according to People's Daily on Monday.
On Sunday, the committee's 13th session of the 14th NPC Standing Committee heard a report about addressing corruption and misconduct that directly affects the general public, from Liu Jinguo, director of the NSC.
The report said the NSC focused on efforts to tackle formalism and bureaucratism, aiming to ease the burdens on grassroots governance. It highlighted the NSC integrated approaches of improving disciplinary mechanisms, strengthening oversight and rectification, and publicly disclosing typical cases. The NSC conducted on-site inspections and unannounced visits across 13 provinces, regions, and municipalities.
The report detailed stringent investigations into excessive and frequent inspections and vanity projects, with 32 cases publicly disclosed. Nationwide, over 700 "blindly pursued landscaping" projects were halted or rectified as a result of these efforts.
One case in the report described how Xixian county in Xinyang, Central China's Henan Province, mandated the trimming of roadside weeds and wild trees to an exact height of about 10 cm during rural environmental improvement efforts, sparking significant public outrage.
The NSC conducted covert inspections and direct oversight, culminating in punitive measures against nine officials, including the Vice Mayor of Xinyang and the Secretary of Xixian County Committee of the CPC. The case was publicly disclosed nationwide.
In other cases, the NSC severely dealt with problems such as Liu Kewen, former Secretary of Hejing County Committee of the CPC in Northwest China's Xinjiang, who wasted resources by invalidly painting rural roadside walls white, and Cheng Zhiyi, former Secretary of Jiangjin District Committee of the CPC in Southwest China's Chongqing, who delayed addressing substandard drinking water quality in towns and villages, resulting in its deterioration over time.
The NSC emphasized that these cases underscore the need for cultivating a proper perspective on governance and metrics of success among officials.