Exposing Corruption on the Internet: Illusory Victories?

My colleague Lin Yang writes on the interet and corruption:

Chinese Netizens have seemingly scored another victory in the battle against corruption. An online campaign to expose the extravagant lifestyle of Zhou Jiugeng, head of a district real estate bureau in the city of Nanjing, led to his dismissal after someone posted a photo of Zhou in a meeting smoking 25-USD-per-pack cigarettes and wearing a watch that looked like a 14,000 USD Vacheron Constantin, Zhou was fired on the 28th for “expressing inappropriate opinions and spending office funds on luxury cigarettes.”
 
It’s not the first “victory” for the anti-corruption forces, who in the past year have repeatedly unleashed the power of their ”human flesh search engine”, a mass-participation investigation to find out all the personal details of the subjects of internet posts. The most famous case would be Lin Jiaxiang, party secretary of the Shenzhen city Marine Affairs Bureau, whose drunken attempt to molest an 11 year old girl and subsequent obnoxious insults to the onlookers was captured on a surveillance camera and put on the internet. With outraged netizens around the country analyzing the video clip, Lin’s identity was soon revealed, and his supervisors at the central government level department had to hold a public press conference on the official result of investigation into the case.
 
But how much do such victories go to addressing the root cause of the corruption problem? Chinese Business View, a Chinese language paper based in Xi’an that’s famous for its sharp commentaries has a good piece on the Zhou Jiugeng incident, providing an alternative viewpoint to the usual hailing of the power of the people. The commentary questions the efficiency of these grassroots internet-based anti-corruption efforts. “It took millions of netizens a year to bring about the downfall of a few low-ranking officials. Once the enthusiasm of the netizens wears off, who will take over the anti-corruption campaign?” It also questions the performance of the disciplinary organs in the government, whose role is to carry out investigation and punishment of corruption. “Even after the Internet had already turned Zhou Jiugeng into a household name, our disciplinary officials still refused to look into the case, saying they had not received any official complaints about Zhou.”
 
Corrupt officials need more than the fear of a public lynching on the internet, And the cyberspace anti-corruption drive needs the backing of an official anti-corruption mechanism to carry on. Putting officials under internet scrutiny will not cure them of corruption. As the commentary argues, they can simply “acquire some acting skills—learn not to say anything that the public finds offensive and to hide their expensive cigarettes. It’s also not hard to ask their secretaries to put their expensive cigarettes in cheap packs.” Without genuine systematic efforts to declare war on corruption, the internet anti-corruption victories could be just an illusion.
 

Related Topics: China
  • Latest on Global Spin

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    Obama’s Afghanistan Problem: Neither Karzai Nor the Taliban Like the ‘Reconciliation’ Script

    President Barack Obama huddled with President Hamid Karzai in Chicago on Sunday, urging Afghanistan’s leader to accelerate negotiations with the Taliban over a political solution to the longest war in America’s history. But the prospect for Karzai negotiating successfully with the insurgents is clouded by a question raised by Josef Stalin, on the eve of World War II, in response to the suggestion that he offer concessions to the Pope: “How many divisions does he have?” The Taliban now ask the same question about Karzai. And should the Afghan leader also ask himself the question, he might reach a similarly dispiriting conclusion. Karzai’s independent power base is minimal, as is his ability to influence the outcome of his country’s civil war absent direct U.S. involvement. And that gives neither Karzai nor the Taliban much incentive to cut a deal with the other.

    JOSEPH EID/AFP/GettyImages

    Must-Reads from Around the World, May 21, 2012

    Spillover - Lebanon’s Daily Star reports on escalating violence inside the country after soldiers shot dead a prominent anti-Bashar al-Assad Muslim preacher Sunday. “The gravity of the incident… prompted leaders on both sides of the political divide to call for calm and restraint to prevent the country from sliding into sectarian strife as a result of a spillover of the 15-month-old uprising in neighboring Syria,” it says.

    UPPA / ZUMAPRESS

    A Royal Party: Britain Celebrates 60 Years of Queen Elizabeth II

    From parades to concerts, and even tea with commoners, 86 year-old Queen Elizabeth II is traversing the United Kingdom to commemorate her Diamond Jubilee.

  • conscienceinchina

    Fighting corruption with internet = Asking for the moon!!

    Don’t forget, the CCP controls everything on the internet in China, even every word, picture, mail, post and dialogue. The occasional incidents such as “Zhou” and “Lin”, just hit the spot of the CCP, because they need such eyewash winkling several fall guys from a vast amount of corruptionists to save this putrid regime. Now they are making good use of such incidents to propagandize their “great accomplishment of anti-corruption”. At the same time they are clear-headed on the truth that anti-corruption is anti-CCP!

  • anthill581

    Things are changing. Now, the chinese people got tianya.cn. Internet is also press.

blog comments powered by Disqus