logo
China slams grass-roots mismanagement, shames ‘longevity city' debacle as a warning

China slams grass-roots mismanagement, shames ‘longevity city' debacle as a warning

It was a sprawling cultural and tourism project that completely went off the rails, and now Beijing is using it as evidence of grass-roots government mismanagement – one of three high-profile examples of wastefulness newly flagged by China's disciplinary authorities.
Following an investigation, the project – dubbed 'Yaohan Longevity City' and located in Gongcheng Yao autonomous county of Guilin – was condemned as a 'severe waste of resources'.
Initially hailed in 2018 as a key initiative in the county's 30th-anniversary celebration, the undertaking intended to position Gongcheng as a leading hub for health tourism. Now it serves as a warning to other local-level government cadres across China.
Spanning an area of about 9.3 hectares (23 acres), the project was initially expected to attract a total investment of 1.65 billion yuan (about US$229 million). However, due to a broken capital chain and a series of poor decisions by local authorities, only 540 million yuan was spent, with six out of the eleven planned buildings left abandoned and idle.
Authorities in the county, with a population of nearly 250,000 people, 'made blind decisions to build cultural and tourism projects out of touch with reality, resulting in idleness and waste', China's Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) said in its report, released this week.
Deng Xiaoqiang, the primary backer of the project, who was found guilty of misappropriating 5 million yuan (US$700,000) under the guise of loans to a company he controlled, was expelled from the Communist Party in December 2022.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Myanmar gives life sentences to 12 - 5 of them Chinese
Myanmar gives life sentences to 12 - 5 of them Chinese

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Myanmar gives life sentences to 12 - 5 of them Chinese

Myanmar military courts have sentenced a dozen individuals – including five Chinese nationals – to life imprisonment for their involvement in multiple human trafficking cases, state-run media reported on Saturday. According to the Myanmar Alin newspaper, the convictions stem from a range of offences including the online distribution of sex videos and the trafficking of Myanmar women into forced marriages in China. In one case, five people, including two Chinese nationals identified as Lin Te and Wang Xiaofeng, were sentenced to life imprisonment by a military court in Yangon, the country's largest city, on July 29. They were found guilty under Myanmar's Anti-Trafficking in Persons law for producing sex videos involving three Myanmar couples and distributing the footage online for profit. In a separate case, the same court sentenced a woman and three Chinese nationals, Yibo, Cao Qiu Quan and Chen Huan. The group was convicted of planning to transport two Myanmar women, recently married to two of the convicted Chinese men, into China, the report said. Thousands of women and girls from Myanmar have been smuggled into China, duped into travelling there then sold into forced marriages. File photo: SCMP Additionally, three other people received life sentences from a separate military court for selling a woman as a bride to China and for attempting to do the same with another woman.

Will Chinese Z-10ME attack helicopters now power Pakistan air force?
Will Chinese Z-10ME attack helicopters now power Pakistan air force?

South China Morning Post

time6 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Will Chinese Z-10ME attack helicopters now power Pakistan air force?

Images circulating online suggest Pakistan's military has received a shipment of Chinese-made advanced attack helicopters, a version of which has been deployed by the People's Liberation Army (PLA) near China's mountainous border with India In the past week, photos and videos of the Z-10ME , the export version of the Chinese multirole attack helicopter, have appeared on Pakistani social media accounts. On Tuesday, a social media user believed to be an active-duty member of the Pakistan Army uploaded a video clearly showing the helicopter airborne, apparently conducting field airport support missions from a military base. The video was captioned: 'First look at Pakistan's Z-10ME attack helicopter armed with next-gen air-to-ground missiles.' This followed a photo posted on Monday by another user showing a Z-10ME undergoing ground maintenance. The helicopter bore the words 'Pakistan Army' and serial number '786-301' on its fuselage and tail. The image marked the first credible evidence of the Z-10ME's operational status within the Pakistan Army Aviation Corps.

EU condemns Macau authorities for arrest of former lawmaker and activist
EU condemns Macau authorities for arrest of former lawmaker and activist

South China Morning Post

time9 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

EU condemns Macau authorities for arrest of former lawmaker and activist

The European Union has condemned Macau authorities for arresting a democracy activist from the former Portuguese enclave over alleged national security violations. In a statement on Saturday, the EU said the arrest of Au Kam-san, a former pro-democracy lawmaker of Macau, 'adds to the existing concerns about the ongoing erosion of political pluralism and freedom of speech' in the city. The casino hub was returned to China by Portugal in 1999. Like Hong Kong, Macau is also run under Beijing's 'one country, two systems' policy. 'The EU recalls that the respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms is a central element of the Macau Basic Law and 'one country, two systems'. 'It is essential that the protected rights and freedoms of Macau residents remain fully upheld in line with the Macau Basic Law, the Sino-Portuguese Joint Declaration of 1987 and Macau's commitments under the International Covenant for Civil and Political Right,' the EU statement read. Au, 68, was taken away from his home on Wednesday. A leading Macau democrat, Au was accused of colluding with foreign forces in breach of the city's national security law, marking the first publicly known arrest under the legislation since its enactment in 2009.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store