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China's Three Gorges replaces top executives amid graft probe

by Reuters
Wednesday, 26 March 2014 05:13 GMT

A man stands on the Three Gorges dam in Yichang, Hubei province August 9, 2012. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

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The scandal has reignited public anger over the $59-billion dam, which was funded by a special levy paid by all citizens

BEIJING, March 26 (Reuters) - China's Three Gorges Corp, which built the world's biggest hydropower scheme, has replaced its chairman and general manager, the company said, in the latest major reshuffle of a state-owned firm as the government steps up a fight on graft.

Some officials of Three Gorges, set up in 1993 to run the hydropower scheme, were guilty of nepotism, shady property deals and dodgy bidding procedures, the ruling Communist Party's anti-graft watchdog found in February.

The scandal has reignited public anger over the $59-billion dam, which was funded by a special levy paid by all citizens.

Chairman Cao Guangjing has been removed from his position and would be assigned another job, the company said in a statement on Tuesday. It named Cao's replacement as Lu Chun, but gave no further details.

Three Gorges will also replace its general manager, Chen Fei, with Wang Lin, the firm cited Wang Jingqing, a deputy head of the Organisation Department of the Communist Party's central committee, as saying at a company meeting on March 24. It gave no details of Wang Lin's background.

The company has not accused Cao and Chen of any wrongdoing.

China's largest oil and gas producer, PetroChina Co Ltd, and its parent, China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), are already enmeshed in one of the biggest corruption investigations into the state sector in years, launched half a year ago.

The probe, part of a nationwide anti-corruption campaign led by President Xi Jinping, is still expanding and there are no signs it will end soon.

Five former top executives of both companies are being investigated for "serious discipline violations", a phrase generally used to describe graft.

PetroChina removed Wei Zhigang, the former head of the firm's Indonesian operations, from his post, amid an unspecified official probe into the executive, three Chinese oil industry sources familiar with the matter told Reuters in October. (Reporting by Sui-Lee Wee and Li Hui; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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