Government and Policy

Former city education chief expelled for corruption

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-12-29 16:04
Large Medium Small

BEIJING: A former city education chief has been expelled from the Communist Party of China for allegedly taking bribes to illegally transfer and employ teachers.

An official with the Hebei provincial government said Tuesday that Feng Yunsheng, former director of the Education Bureau of Wu'an City, had also been referred for prosecution after an investigation by the provincial government.

The city's education bureau, which usually transferred teachers during the summer vacation, transferred 253 teachers in 2009, including 148 rural teachers to cities, the official said.

Related readings:
Former city education chief expelled for corruption Auditors sniff big misused funds trail
Former city education chief expelled for corruption Auditors get tough on misappropriation
Former city education chief expelled for corruption New chief named for Shanghai anti-graft bureau
Former city education chief expelled for corruption Email effective in fighting crime
Former city education chief expelled for corruption China's anti-graft chief urges to clean up construction sector

The timing and number seemed normal, but the transfer decisions were made by Feng alone, without reference to and consideration by the bureau's executive committee, the official said.

The transfers were processed by Yang Shubing, the bureau's director of human resources, who was given a warning by the CPC and was removed from the post of director of human resources, the official said.

Feng and Yang were allegedly involved in the illegal transfer or employment of 29 teachers, including transferring 10 unqualified teachers from rural to urban areas, and the appointments of 13 unqualified persons as teachers, and violating regulations to recruit six teachers.

The transferred teachers were sent back to their original positions and the unqualified teachers were sacked while others remained in their new posts to "ensure normal teaching order," the official said.

Feng had allegedly accepted eight bribes worth a total of 870,000 yuan ($128,000) to transfer and recruit teachers, the official said.

The provincial government had called for staff of the educational system to learn the education laws to avoid similar cases, the official said.