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SINO DAILY
China surveying government suicides amid graft drive
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Jan 29, 2015


China lawmaker in deep trouble over sinkhole
Beijing (AFP) Jan 29, 2015 - A Chinese lawmaker was being sought by authorities Thursday after trying to dig out a five-storey basement in his Beijing courtyard home, only for a giant sinkhole to swallow four of his neighbours' houses, reports said.

An editorial in the state-run China Daily newspaper blasted Li Baojun for having displayed a "deep disregard for the law".

His house, in a historic neighbourhood in Beijing's Xicheng district, also collapsed when his ambitious extension plans went awry at the weekend.

Fifteen of his neighbours were reportedly left homeless, although no-one was injured.

Photos posted online and in Chinese state media showed a gaping 10-metre-deep (35-foot-deep) hole extending into a roadway, blocked off by tarpaulins and traffic cones.

Li is a member of the local People's Congress in the eastern city of Xuzhou and heads an auto parts company, the China Daily said, adding authorities had been unable to locate him.

A total of 1,400 cubic metres (50,000 cubic feet) of concrete were needed to fill the hole, it reported.

Despite decades of development, the centre of the Chinese capital still has pockets of ancient courtyard homes with traditional roofs, packed along narrow alleys. Some have been renovated into luxury residences that can command huge rents.

Li had been granted a permit to restore the courtyard, but not to build a basement, the paper said.

"It's common for some residents in the area to dig a basement without permission," one local surnamed Ru told the Global Times newspaper. "Do we have to wait till we are all buried for the problem to be solved?"

Construction projects in China must be approved by local authorities, but laws are poorly enforced.

In recent years, a series of illegal structures has provoked reactions from humour to anger in China, among them a rock villa on top of a 26-storey Beijing apartment tower that sparked an outcry over the contempt for public safety by the country's rich.

The China Daily chastised Li for "reminding us, again, of exemplary lawlessness."

"We are curious what has motivated him to openly ignore an explicit local legislation," the paper wrote. "We are ashamed to be talking about a lawmaker's disregard of the law. We have no idea what has brought him the seat on the local legislature. But more likely than not, it was money."

China's ruling Communist party has ordered a survey of "unusual deaths" among officials, government websites showed Thursday, after reports that some had committed suicide to escape a crackdown on corruption.

An "urgent notice" called on officials to provide details of "party members who have died in unusual circumstances" since 2012, according to posts on government and party websites in three provinces seen by AFP.

China's President Xi Jinping has touted a crackdown on graft since assuming the party's top post in 2012, and some officials have reportedly killed themselves to escape possible criminal proceedings and prevent the seizure of their ill-gotten assets, to the benefit of their families.

Respected business news outlet Caixin said such notices had appeared on websites in at least nine provinces, adding that 50 party and government officials have been publically declared to have died of "unnatural causes" since 2012.

The Communist party is calling for a tally of deaths of officials at all levels, with details to be provided if the person was confirmed to have committed suicide, it added.

The survey requires suicides to be placed into several categories, one of which is "suspected of discipline violations", the party's standard euphemism for graft, it said.

The state-run China Daily said in September that Lou Xuequan, a former district Party chief in the eastern city of Nanjing, "reportedly hanged himself at his home" having been "dismissed from his position for accepting money as 'gifts'".

Xi's anti-corruption campaign has ensnared several current and former high-ranking officials, although most of the cadres investigated have been at low levels of government.

Critics say China has failed to implement institutional safeguards against graft such as public asset disclosure, an independent judiciary, and free media, leaving anti-corruption campaigns subject to the influence of politics.

Communist party academic Lin Zhe wrote in the China Daily last year that suicide has become a "judicial loophole for corrupt officials to escape punishment."

"Disciplinary and other investigations against a corrupt official... end in the event of their death," he wrote.

Officials who commit suicide "preserve their titles and honour, but also preserve the material gains they have made for their families, since their illegal income will no longer be confiscated," he added.


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