Beijing, CHINA:
Chinese authorities have released regulations to ban civil servants from drinking alcohol outside their working hours to boost their work performance and improve the government’s image.
The move can help state employees concentrate on their work and avoid mistakes, according to official media.
It is also deemed crucial in the prevention of bribery, which often takes place during lavish, out-of-office meals that feature liquor.
Similar rules are now being enforced in multiple regions – including the city of Nanjing and the provinces of Gansu and Qinghai.
While some local authorities have in the past cracked down on work-related drinking events, the recent push prohibits the consumption of alcohol in officials’ private time on weekdays completely.
In the county of Qingcheng in Gansu, government workers, civil servants and staff at state-run companies have been ordered not to enjoy alcoholic beverages during and after their eight hours in the office.
For those who do need to drink during the week, they must send an application to their higher-ups in advance, according to a government release.
The applicants must explain the nature of the event, the identity of other attendees and how much alcohol they plan to drink.
For those who do need to drink during the week, they must send an application to their higher-ups in advance. In the file photo above, Chinese President Xi jinping toasts the guests during a banquet marking the 70th anniversary of the founding of the P.R.C. on September 30, 2019
The police authority of Nanjing, the capital of Jiangsu Province, demand all officers in the city not drink on workdays to ‘improve the force’s conduct and enforce discipline’.
In Nanyang, central China’s Henan Province, Communist officials and civil servants will face random alcohol tests at least once a month to ensure they follow the no-drinking order.
While in Menyuan in Qinghai, the practice has been brought in to clamp down on ‘extravagance and hedonism’.
Although most places launched the rules before or in July, the action became a trending topic this week when many Chinese are meeting family and friends for meals to celebrate the country’s National Day.
In China, bribery often takes place during lavish, out-of-office meals that feature liquor
Commenting on the policy from Qingcheng County, Beijing News billed it as the ‘strictest alcohol ban’.
A column, which also appeared on state news agency Xinhua’s website, claimed that government workers shouldered more responsibilities at work than ordinary citizens, and drinking liquor would impact their work performance.
The habit would also encourage lavish spending and corruption, it added.
The article went on to criticise the ban and said it could invade government workers’ privacy.
The author said though it was ‘essential’ to forbid booze during office hours, the necessity to extend it after work was ‘excessive’.
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