9 August 2013
Liu Tienan, formerly deputy head of the National Development and Reform
Commission, "accepted huge amounts of bribes", Xinhua news agency reported.
Allegations against Mr Liu emerged online in December, when a well-known
journalist accused him of corruption.
The move comes amid a high-profile crackdown on corruption.
Mr Liu "took advantage of his position to seek profits for others," Xinhua
reported, citing the
Communist Party's Central Commission for Discipline
Inspection.
He was found to "seek benefits for his relatives' businesses by breaking
relevant regulations" and had accepted "cash and gifts", Xinhua said.
The commission also found Mr Liu was "morally degenerate", Xinhua added,
without giving further details.
Luo Changping, deputy editor of the respected Caijing Magazine, first
levelled allegations against Mr Liu in December.
On entries posted on his microblog, Mr Luo said the official was involved in
questionable financial deals, fabricated his academic record and threatened to
kill a former mistress.
In May, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection began investigating
Mr Liu for suspected "serious disciplinary violations".
Chinese President Xi Jinping has called for a crackdown on corruption, vowing
to tackle it from the powerful "tigers" at the top to the "flies" at the bottom
of the Communist Party.
In June, Lei Zhengfu, a former official at the centre of a sex tape extortion
scandal, was jailed for accepting bribes.
In July, former Railways Minister Liu Zhijun was given a suspended death
sentence for corruption and abuse of power.
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