Want China Times, Xinhua 2013-12-10
| A selection of dishes at a restaurant in Zhengzhou, Henan province. (Photo/CNS) |
China's
central authorities on Sunday published a regulation that explicitly ruled out
dishes containing shark fins, bird nests and wild animal products in official
reception dinners.
The
document, jointly issued by the general offices of the Communist Party of China
Central Committee and the State Council, detailed regulations of the use of
public funding on receptions by local authorities to receive visiting Party or
governmental officials.
Shark fins,
bird nests and products of rare wild animals are popular materials in luxury
dinners in China.
FRUGAL
RECEPTIONS
Officials
on business tours should arrange their own meals according to relevant
expenditure standards and the local hosts are allowed to provide only one
reception dinner if needed, the regulation said.
The
regulation said cigarettes and up-market liquors are not allowed to be served
at official dinners and such receptions should not be held in private clubs or
upscale places.
It is also
prohibited to organize conference and activities at tourist attractions or
commercial entertainment venues and government funds should not be used to
cover officials' personal recreational visits, according to the documents.
Moreover,
officials below provincial level should not live in suite rooms on their business
trips, it said.
Local hosts
are also banned from giving cash, negotiable securities, souvenirs or local
products as gifts for the officials.
The
regulation reiterated the requirements that no welcoming ceremony, banners or
carpets should be arranged in receiving officials at airports and stations and
the number of the officials' team should be strictly controlled.
The use of
government vehicles and police cars in reception activities should also be kept
within a reasonable level, it said.
TIGHTENED
SUPERVISION
The
regulation said public spending on official receptions should be listed as a
separate item in the authorities' budgets and relevant information should be
made open for the public's supervision.
Disciplinary
and supervisory agencies are told to strengthen supervision over the use of
government funds on such activities and officials who violated the rule should
be held accountable.
In addition
to simplicity and transparency, the document stated that traditions of relevant
ethnic minority groups should also be well respected.
According
to the document, the new rules are to promote frugality, oppose extravagance
and enhance the anti-corruption drive among Party and governmental authorities.
The new
regulation will also be applied to state-owned enterprises, state-owned
financial institutions and state-sponsored organizations.
FURTHER
REFORMS
In addition
to strict rules, the document also features reform efforts to curb extravagance
in official receptions, said a statement by the Government Offices
Administration on Sunday.
The
regulation has mapped out reforms in the administrative system of official
receptions and a system of centralized management of the resources for the
reception expenses, the statement said.
Moreover,
the statement said rules in the new regulation are practical, making the
enforcement much easier.
Lin Jiabin,
an analyst with the social development division of the Development Research
Center of the State Council, said the new regulation is expected to put a halt
to the lavishing on official reception banquets as the rules are very detailed
and practical.
However, he
also urged further improvement to the systems for the administration of
financial and fiscal expenditures to ensure the long-term enforcement of the
anti-extravagance drive.
Local
authorities tend to offer excessive reception for visiting officials as part of
their ostentation displays, and the root for such problems lies in the
loopholes with relevant systems, said Lin Shuanglin, director of the public
finance research center of Peking University.
Such
practices have caused huge waste and fueled the lavish life styles among some
officials, said Xie Chuntao, a professor with the Party School of the CPC
Central Committee in Beijing.
As the new
regulation has clearly defined the limits and restrictions in relevant
activities, it is expected to generate positive effects to the frugality
campaign, Lin Shuanglin said.
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