China's online community won't have Watch-Wearing Brother to kick around anymore.
Quoting local officials, the state-run Xinhua news agency said on Friday that Yang Dacai, a local official in Shaanxi province, had been ousted from his post for the possession of numerous expensive watches and other violations of discipline. Xinhua said officials are continuing a probe into his conduct.
Mr. Yang rose to Internet notoriety earlier last month after a photographer captured him smiling at the scene of a deadly collision between and bus and a tanker truck in Shaanxi that killed 36 people.
But it was his accessories that soon became the focus of China's online vigilantes. Some noticed the lowly public official appeared to be wearing an expensive watch. China's massive community of volunteer Internet sleuths soon found a number of other photos of Mr. Yang wearing a succession of different high-end watches the sort of time pieces a local official in the hustings would be hard-pressed to afford with a regular government salary.
Dubbed Watch-Wearing Brother by his critics, Mr. Yang went on the offensive. In a highly unusual move for a Chinese public official, he turned to the Internet to address is critics directly. Writing on his account on Sina Corp.'s Weibo microblogging service, he said he was sorry for his smile at the scene of the accident, explaining that he was having a hard time understanding the local dialect and wanted to put nervous comrades at ease. On the watches, he assured his critics that he purchased the watches 'using my own legal income.'
China's propaganda organs appeared to see the fall of Mr. Yang on Friday as an example to prod local officials to do more to root out corruption a problem even top officials concede is so big that it could hinder China's development. In a commentary, Xinhua nodded to the public's elephant-like memory for official malfeasance, saying new headlines don't make readers forget the old. 'Therefore, responsible governments should face the scandals instead of sticking their heads in the sand,' it said.
Internet users had revived discussions of Mr. Yang earlier this week after noticing that the results of an investigation into his behavior had not been released.
'Yang has been out of public sight for half a month after the local disciplinary body vowed severe punishment if any corruption is discovered,' the Xinhua commentary said.
'Better late than never, however, the governments should also strengthen their accountability mechanism, make more efforts to investigate violations of disciplines and laws instead of waiting the public to tell them to do so.'
Carlos Tejada
|