Over 2,200 investigated for fiscal violations in China

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Chinese authorities have investigated more than 2,200 government officials for involvement in major fiscal fraud, the country's top auditor said Sunday.

Briefing lawmakers on the audit of the central government 2014 budget, Liu Jiayi, head of the National Audit Office (NAO), said the majority of violations took place in sectors involving public funds, state assets and state-owned resources, such as land and mining.

In particular, auditors found that over 780 billion yuan originally earmarked for land transfers was misappropriated by crooked officials to fill administrative expenses gaps, lent to others or used to construct new office buildings and venues. Intermediary agencies played a vital role in cases where officials abused their power and colluded with outsiders.

In one typical case, Hunan development and reform commission chief economist Yang Shifang and his associates allegedly stole more than 13 million yuan by allowing three agencies run by their relatives to grant investment subsidies to ineligible companies.

Auditors also uncovered 5 billion yuan in illegal gains by officials and their close affiliates who profited from privileged information concerning state-owned resources, development plans and stocks.

He cited an unnamed relative of former China Southern Power Grid deputy general manager Xiao Peng, who saw his stock market investment grow by 50 percent annually for eight consecutive years while sustaining no losses whatsoever by taking advantage of insider information from a number of electricity providers.

Malpractice was also detected in news media coverage and in attracting foreign investment where "under-the-table deals were sealed in the name of public welfare and government policy implementation," Liu added.

The audit office will try to rectify these problems and will report its progress to the Standing Committee of the NPC before the end of the year, he said. Endi

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