Home Asia Turn Knife Inward: China’s Xi Asks Party To Address Corruption

Turn Knife Inward: China’s Xi Asks Party To Address Corruption

In a speech published by Qiushi Journal, Xi Jinping warned the party must counter any interest group or privileged class that seeks to corrupt party members or exploit their power for personal gain.
Chinese President Xi Jinping meets the media following the 20th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China October 23, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo

President Xi Jinping urged China’s Communist Party to “turn the knife inward” to address disciplinary issues, including corruption, and intensify efforts to target both corrupt officials and their enablers.

Since coming to power over a decade ago, Xi has cracked down on corruption involving party members, whether they were corrupt high-ranking “tigers” or lowly “flies” who failed to implement government policies.

But despite the sweeping crackdown, the party continues to be plagued by graft, particularly within the armed forces. Two former defence ministers have been purged from the party in the past two years for “serious violations of discipline”, a euphemism for corruption.

The party must take counter-measures against any interest group, organisation of power, or privileged class from preying on or corrupting party members, Xi warned in a speech published on Monday by Qiushi Journal, a flagship party magazine.

“As the situation and tasks facing the party change, there will inevitably be all kinds of conflicts and problems within the party,” he said.

“We must have the courage to turn the knife inward and eliminate their negative impact in a timely manner to ensure that the party is always full of vigour and vitality.”

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Xi’s call to “turn the knife inward” was part of a speech he gave at a major meeting with the party’s anti-graft watchdog on Jan. 8, but had not been disclosed previously.

The excerpts published on Monday suggest a renewed and wider push to instil discipline and hunt down officials seeking personal gain and those who lead them astray.

Last month, the defence ministry disclosed that an admiral who had served on the Central Military Commission, the country’s highest-level military command body, was under investigation for “serious violations of discipline”.

Last year, about 610,000 party officials were punished for violating party discipline, of which 49 were officials above the vice minister or governor level, according to statistics from the party’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.

(With inputs from Reuters)