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Chinese Police Chief Urges Officers to be Loyal to Party Amid Graft Crackdown


FILE - Chinese police officers march out of the Jinan Intermediate People's Court in Jinan in eastern China's Shandong province.
FILE - Chinese police officers march out of the Jinan Intermediate People's Court in Jinan in eastern China's Shandong province.
China's police chief wrote on Friday that his officers must uphold the leadership of the Communist Party and be loyal to it as the government targets the domestic security apparatus in a crackdown on corruption.

Sources have told Reuters that China's former security tsar, Zhou Yongkang, considered one of the most powerful politicians of the decade, has been put under effective house arrest while the party investigates corruption allegations against him.

Last month, the government began a graft investigation into a one-time deputy public security minister, Li Dongsheng, an ally of Zhou's.

Li held a rank equivalent to cabinet minister, and state media reported that he is the first member of the ruling party's Political and Legal Affairs Committee, the influential domestic security body which Zhou used to head, to be investigated for graft.

Writing in the party's official People's Daily, Public Security Minister Guo Shengkun said his more than two million officers had to be “absolutely loyal and absolutely clean,” and stand steadfastly in line with the orders and politics of President Xi Jinping.

All public security personnel must “take real actions to resolutely defend the leadership of the Communist Party,” Guo said. “Unswervingly be a loyal defender of the party and the people.”

Guo made no direct mention of Li's case or of Zhou. The government has yet to make any official statement about Zhou.

President Xi has made fighting deeply ingrained graft a central theme of his new administration, and has promised to take down both high-level “tigers” as well as lowly “flies.”

Zhou had expanded his role into one of the most powerful and controversial fiefdoms in the one-party government. Under his stewardship, the domestic security budget exceeded that of the military.

However, Zhou was implicated in rumors in 2012 that he had hesitated in moving against Bo Xilai, who had been a contender for top leadership but fell in a divisive scandal following accusations that Bo's wife had murdered a British businessman.

When Zhou retired in late 2012, the position he occupied was downgraded and his successor, Meng Jianzhu, is only a member of the Politburo, the 25-member body which reports to the elite Politburo Standing Committee.

Guo - whose boss is Meng - also warned his officers to be on guard against the “ideological infiltration of anti-Chinese Western forces”, likely a reference to voices in China pushing for political reform, something Xi has shown no sign of allowing.

Xi confounded expectations that he may loosen up upon his appointment as president last year, and has instead overseen a sweeping crackdown on dissent, a theme Guo implied would continue in the interests of national development.

“Only if there is social stability can reform and development continue to proceed,” he wrote.
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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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