New | What NOT to learn from Zhou Yongkang and Ling Jihua: Fall of China’s corrupt party ‘gangs’ a lesson for its cadres
Chinese officials warned to toe the line as Communist Party makes an example of disgraced figures in the corrupt “Petroleum” and “Secretary” factions
China’s Communist Party cadres were warned on Tuesday to learn from the downfall of factions of corrupt officials, known as the “Petroleum” and “Secretary” gangs.
The stern warning was meant for other factions within the party, who were believed to still be operating more in their clique’s interests than in the party’s, according to analysts.
“[We] must constantly be alert of, discover and punish in time those who form their own circles within the party,” said an article published in the mouthpiece of the top anti-graft watchdog.
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“The Petroleum Gang and the Secretary Gang have already been eradicated. They are lessons to be learned and others should watch their steps. If you don’t toe the line, get out,” read the piece in the China Discipline Inspection Paper on Tuesday.
Many top cadres who had worked with the state-owned oil sector have been sacked for corruption in President Xi Jinping’s massive anti-graft drive. The highest-ranking official in the faction, known as the Petroleum Gang, was former security tsar Zhou Yongkang.
Another handful of senior officials fired for graft were part of the Secretary Gang. Among them were Ling Jihua, former top aide to ex-president Hu Jintao, and Zhou Benshun, former Hebei party boss who had served as Zhou Yongkang’s secretary.
Besides taking bribes – a criminal offence – they formed factions within the party, which is a violation of party rule.