Agency Name: | Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Central Military Commission |
Nativename A: | 中央军委纪律检查委员会 |
Nativename R: | Zhōngyāng Jūnwěi Jìlǜ Jiǎnchá Wěiyuánhuì |
Seal: | China Emblem PLA.svg |
Formed: | 1955 |
Jurisdiction: | People's Liberation Army |
Headquarters: | Ministry of National Defense compound ("August 1st Building"), Beijing |
Chief1 Name: | Gen. Zhang Shengmin |
Chief1 Position: | Secretary |
Agency Type: | Functional department of the Central Military Commission |
Parent Agency: | Central Military Commission |
The Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Central Military Commission (; abbreviated CMCCDI) is the top disciplinary organ of the Central Military Commission of China. The CMCCDI has "dual responsibility" to the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and the Central Military Commission. The membership of the CMCCDI is selected by the Central Military Commission.
The first military organ in charge of enforcing discipline and control was established in 1955, but was dissolved during the Cultural Revolution. The modern incarnation of the CMCCDI was formed in January 1980 under the direction of the Central Committee of the Communist Party.[1] Since 1990, the DICCMC's work has largely been carried out by the Political Work Department, the supreme political organ of the military. The head of the CMCDIC is customarily also the deputy chief of the General Political Department, and since the 16th Party Congress in 2002, concurrently a Deputy Secretary of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.[1]
The CCDI has occasionally directly intervened in cases dealing with high-ranking officers in the People's Liberation Army. However, the direct involvement of the CCDI has only been cited in high-profile cases, such as those of Vice Admiral Wang Shouye in 2005, and Lt. General Gu Junshan in 2012.[1] Usually, once the CMCCDI completes an investigation, the case is handed onto military prosecution authorities or to a court martial. Unlike CCDI cases, conclusions of which are generally publicly announced in the form of a press release, specific details about cases under the sole jurisdiction of the CMCCDI rarely appear on the public record. Occasionally, the CMCCDI will conduct the "initial investigation" into the purported wrongdoings of a military officer, and then hand over to the case to the CCDI for "further investigation".[1]
The formal title is Secretary of the Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Central Military Commission of the Communist Party of China.
Dissolved during the Cultural Revolution