China's top 10 scandals in 2013
Updated: 2013-12-23 19:18
(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
||||||||
No 5: Chengguan (Urban management)
On May 31, seven chengguan were involved in a violent altercation with three bicycle store salesmen in Yan'an, Shaanxi province. Footage circulated on the Internet showed that a burly uniformed chengguan officer stamped on the head of a salesman on the ground.
The video triggered a public outcry, and on June 4 the Yan'an city government announced that it had suspended four officials and four employees involved in the incident.
Related:
Chengguan burdened by reputation
No 6: Academics
In September, Zhang Shuguang, former deputy chief engineer of the then Ministry of Railways, confessed during his trial that he spent 23 million yuan ($3.7 million) on buying votes to try and gain membership of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).
The CAS responded on Sept 11, saying that it had not received any complaint about fraud in an honorary academic election involving a former railway official.
Related:
Former China rail chief admits graft
No 7: Temporary workers
In its edition of June 17, China Newsweek magazine published a cover story "More trouble for temporary workers", criticizing "arrogance and prejudice of public power" after temporary workers repeatedly became the scapegoat in a number of government scandals.
A survey by the Beijing Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, the nation's top advisory body, showed that the capital's chengguan office had 7,000 civil servants and 6,500 temporary workers in 2011.
Related:
'More trouble by temporary workers'
No 8: Journalists
In late October, Chen Yongzhou, a reporter for New Express, confessed that he accepted bribes to defame the State-owned construction equipment maker Zoomlion. The reports resulted in the company's share price dropping and public accusations against its management.
New Express apologized for the stories, vowing to strengthen management of its employees and publication procedure.
Related:
Paper apologizes for reporter's untrue stories
Newspaper offers apology after detained journalist's confession
No 9: "Expert opinions"
Experts, or Zhuangjia in Mandarin, are often unflatteringly referred to by netizens as "bricks" (zhuan has a similar pronunciation) since they have been known to utter some controversial statements.
One prime example concerns Dong Fan, director of the Real Estate Research Center with Beijing Normal University, He triggered an online outcry in September when he said that property prices in Beijing were not high, and could reach 800,000 yuan per square meter in about 25 years.
Related:
Polarized home price predictions confuse prospective buyers
Home prices in Chinese cities to continue rising
No 10: Movie director
Zhang Yimou, a renowned movie director, made headlines in November for violating the law that limits most urban couples to one child.
Zhang said in an open letter on Dec 1 that he, and his wife, Chen Ting, have two sons and a daughter and they are willing to receive punishment in line with the law and regulations. He apologized to the public.
Related:
China to grill Zhang Yimou's agent
Zhang Yimou kids investigation to grill agent
- A return to motherhood at 60
- AK-47 inventor Mikhail Kalashnikov dies
- Oil spill from Qingdao blast kills sea life
- Ice storm hits Toronto
- A man and a child jump off Manhattan building
- Male nurses in demand as caregivers for elderly
- Moving beyond language skills
- Khodorkovsky says he will not enter Russian politics
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Restoring a link to their heritage |
Top universities face exams for corruption |
Taking a humane look at cosmetics |
Listening to the call of the wilderness |
Too young to be criminal |
Patrols bring security to Mekong River |
Today's Top News
Washington tries to shift spying blame to China
China's top 10 scandals in 2013
LA Winds blow into China
Private clubs are targeted by anti-graft campaign
China makes it easier to sue government
China promotes core socialist values
China deliberates adjusting one-child policy
Swift justice urged for murder case
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |