2003 | OriginalPaper | Buchkapitel
The Economics of Corruption and Cronyism — An Institutional Approach to the Reform of Governance
verfasst von : Barbara Krug, Hans Hendrischke
Erschienen in: Corruption and Governance in Asia
Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Enthalten in: Professional Book Archive
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Moral outrage was the response of the Chinese press, when Cheng Kejie, one of the country’s highest officials, Vice-Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress and former Governor of the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, was arrested on grounds of corruption on 25 April 2000. Cheng’s arrest came amidst a spate of serious corruption cases that reached into the top echelons of China’s state leadership (China Aktuell, 2000). His case attracted wide public attention in national and international Chinese media because of his high office, the number of officials implicated, and the involvement of his lover Li Ping (dubbed the “Jiang Qing of Guangxi” by the Hong Kong and overseas Chinese press) (Ming Pao, 2000), daughter-in-law of his predecessor in the position of Governor of Guangxi, and for years the most influential woman in Guangxi. This was not just a case of a local official embezzling public funds, but a story of love and greed of a popular political leader, who had achieved much for his province. This was also not the story of an anonymous mistress, but of an ambitious, intelligent and attractive woman using the position of, first, her father-in-law, then her lover, to systematically, and on a long-term basis, exploit the powers vested in the office of provincial governor.