China investigates Wuhan former mayor who presided over COVID-19 response

People get off a ferry after crossing the Yangtze river in Wuhan ahead of the fifth anniversary of China confirming its first death from the COVID-19. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 08 July 2025
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China investigates Wuhan former mayor who presided over COVID-19 response

  • Zhou Xianwang served as the top Communist Party official in the Chinese metropolis from 2018 until early 2021
  • Beijing’s two key anti-corruption watchdogs said Zhou was suspected of ‘serious violations of disciplines and laws’

BEIJING: Chinese authorities have launched an investigation into the former mayor of the central city of Wuhan, Beijing’s top anti-graft bodies said Tuesday.

Zhou Xianwang served as the top Communist Party official in the Chinese metropolis from 2018 until early 2021, playing a major role in the handling of the first known outbreak of Covid-19.

Beijing’s two key anti-corruption watchdogs said Zhou was suspected of “serious violations of disciplines and laws” – a common euphemism for graft.

He “is currently undergoing disciplinary review and supervision investigation,” according to a statement by the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the National Supervisory Commission.

The statement did not provide details about Zhou’s alleged misconduct or the period of time during which it took place.

Zhou has served in a range of high-level roles, including from 2021 to 2023 as vice chairman of a provincial committee under China’s top political advisory body.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has engaged in an expansive anti-corruption campaign since coming to power over a decade ago, ostensibly aimed at stamping out graft at all levels of the ruling Communist Party.

Supporters say the drive promotes clean governance, while critics say it serves as a tool for Xi to oust political opponents.


Trump administration says it is creating new DOJ division to tackle fraud

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Trump administration says it is creating new DOJ division to tackle fraud

  • Trump administration has said it is freezing funds for some states over fraud allegations
  • Critics say Trump has used fraud probes to go after immigrants and political opponents
WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump’s administration said on Thursday it was creating a new division at the US Department of Justice to combat what the White House called “rampant” fraud across the country.
Rights advocates and critics have said the Trump administration has used fraud allegations as an excuse to target immigrants and political opponents. They have also dismissed Trump’s ability to tackle ‌fraud, citing pardons ‌from Trump to those who have faced ‌fraud ⁠convictions ​in ‌the past.
“To combat the rampant and pervasive problem of fraud in the United States, the DOJ’s new division for national fraud enforcement will enforce the federal criminal and civil laws against fraud targeting federal government programs, federally funded benefits, businesses, nonprofits and private citizens nationwide,” the White House said in a statement.
In recent weeks, the Trump administration ⁠has singled out Minnesota, alleging rampant fraud is being committed by immigrants in the ‌welfare system and social-service programs.
Trump administration officials ‍have frequently and sharply attacked the ‍state’s Somali community, the largest in the country. Rights and ‍immigration advocates say Trump has exaggerated isolated examples and used those to engage in what they called federal overreach.
The assistant attorney general for the new Justice Department division will be responsible for leading the department’s efforts to ​investigate, prosecute and remedy fraud affecting the federal government, federally funded programs and private citizens, the White House said.
The ⁠White House said the official will advise the US attorney general and deputy attorney general “on issues involving significant, high-impact fraud investigations and prosecutions and related policy matters.”
Earlier this week, the Trump administration said it would freeze more than $10 billion in federal childcare and family assistance funds to California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota and New York, citing what the administration called fraud concerns. The states later sued the Trump administration.
The administration has threatened federal funding cuts to organizations and states over a number of issues ranging from alleged fraud in programs in ‌states governed by Democrats to diversity initiatives and pro-Palestinian university protests against US ally Israel’s assault on Gaza.