Zhao, Xiuli: Anti-corruption Must Resolve the Problem of the Officials’ Privilege
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Date: 11/26/2011 1:11:58 PM
Sender: Zhao, Xiuli
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Zhao, Xiuli: Anti-corruption Must Resolve the Problem of the Officials’ Privilege
赵秀丽(Zhao,Xiuli)
Privilege means absolute rights that consequentially results in absolute corruption. The rights in the Chinese officials’ hands are a kind of privilege which is not cramped by legal restrictions. The officials could exchange rights for money, illegally gain a large sum of money and materials, through social activities. Also, the officials’ rights could make their relatives get benefits. They arrange their relatives to do business with some businessmen who need to rely on the officials’ rights, so that they could profit from the business. In that way, the officials’ rights become a shield to assist the businessmen in evading legal sanctions.
A dictatorial system is a corrupt system, and its characteristic shows that the government officials have absolute rights in their hands. Most China communist officials take up the great mass of resource from the society by the privilege in their hands. As a result of that, social wealth is distributed unfairly, and the gap between the rich and the poor is widening continuously. It is the corrupt system that becomes the greatest corruption under China Communist Party's one-party dictatorship.
Opposing privilege is the key point of China's anti-corruption, make the officials’ powers operated in the “sunlight”. The hardest thing of China's anti-privilege is veritably restricting the officials’ powers by the system. To prevent the powers from turning into benefits, every official must be demanded to declare his property and income status. If China realizes democracy, then the problem of privilege will be solved, and so does the problem of corruption.
Zhao, Xiuli
November 26, 2011
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