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China confronts false accusations that plague anti-corruption crusade

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When Chinese President Xi Jinping launched his anti-corruption campaign in 2012, the Communist Party cast its net wide, encouraging party members and the public to report any misconduct.

However, more than a decade later, the party has come to realise many have exploited this to make false accusations against officials.

At a major party conclave in July, Xi and other top officials pledged to “take stronger steps to handle false accusations”.

Observers say unfounded claims about corruption waste resources, undermine careers, dampen morale and deter officials from taking decisive action as China faces economic challenges.

“This disrupts disciplinary inspection work, pollutes the political ecosystem, and hurts the feelings of reform-minded leaders,” said Zhuang Deshui, deputy director at Peking University’s public policy research centre.

Beijing has pledged to foster a healthier political environment that motivates cadres to get things done.

“The aim is not to discourage genuine reporting but to create a positive atmosphere where individuals respect their own rights and report issues transparently, thereby protecting leaders,” Zhuang said.

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