Plenum Explained 3: China to Combat Cross-Border Corruption, Improve Constitutional Review
The plan is part of a five-year legal reform effort that also includes graft-busters taking ‘stronger steps to handle false accusations’
As Beijing take steps to advance anti-corruption legislation at the national level, the resolution proposed creating a law on countering transnational corruption
China will formulate a law to combat cross-border corruption and improve its constitutional review system, as the country seeks to strengthen its oversight over graft and enhance the quality of legislation, according to a five-year reform plan released following a key party meeting.
The plan, part of a sweeping resolution adopted at the Third Plenum, aims to deepen reform to “advance Chinese modernization,” reiterating the Communist Party of China’s commitment to achieving law-based governance “on all fronts” and ensuring unity between reform and rule of law.
Here are some key points covered in the party’s plan for the legal sector.
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