China vows crackdown on teaching material bribery
Updated: 2013-08-29 19:40
(Xinhua)
|
||||||||
BEIJING - China's publication authority has vowed efforts to curb commercial bribery involving teaching materials for school students amid mounting public complaints.
In a circular issued on Thursday, the State General Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television prohibited any institution or individual from seeking profits through illegal means such as getting kickbacks or asking for sponsorship during the publication and marketing of teaching and learning materials for middle and primary school students.
The publishers are asked not to collude with school teachers via "underground trading" or any form of commercial bribery to ask the students to buy learning materials in designated bookstores, according to the circular.
The administration urged publication authorities at various levels to deal with violators strictly.
"Severe penalties, such as revoking publication licenses, should be given in serious cases involving large amounts of money, vile conduct, or with a big social impact," the circular said.
Those who are suspected of being involved in such crimes will be transferred to judicial departments, according to the circular.
The call to curb dodgy commercial practices in the sector came as bribery and other irregular techniques have gravely harmed public interests in recent years, causing growing complaints among students and their parents.
Media institutions and the public should be mobilized to report violations of the rules, the administration said, urging publication authorities to publicize hotlines for tip-offs and earnestly deal with each case reported.
- US vows action in Syria even without UN backing
- Li Na advances to 3rd round
- Obama, marchers mark 50 yrs since King's speech
- Singers' son pleads not guilty
- Rubber duck to float in Beijing
- New York Times, Twitter hacked by Syrian group
- Five apps to help you 'breathe' in Beijing
- Wozniacki survives battle with Chinese qualifier
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Righting the wrongs of patent rights |
Nomads hang on to tradtions |
Urban push |
Growth driver |
Wild Africa: The new attraction to Chinese tourists |
Questioning China's achievements |
Today's Top News
White paper issued on China-Africa cooperation
Suspect charged in Beijing airport blast
87% of AIDS infections in China through sex
DC crowds reflect on MLK Jr's dream
China, US officials discuss defense ties
Obama undecided on Syria attack
Envoy to seek release of US citizen
China leads the way on multilateral defense co-op
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |