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Announcement of Dismissal in Shishou City, Hubei Province
On the morning of July 25th, 2009, Shishou held a meeting of the city's leading cadres, announcing that Tang, secretary of Shishou Municipal Party Committee and member of the Standing Committee of Municipal Party Committee, was dismissed for his poor handling of the "6. 17" incident. At the meeting, the relevant person in charge of Jingzhou Municipal Committee announced this decision. The decision pointed out that Zhong Ming, secretary of Shishou Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China, failed to find and report the situation in time during the "6. 17" incident, missed the best opportunity to deal with the incident, and had an important leadership responsibility. After research by Jingzhou Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China, he was relieved of his post in communist party. Tang, who was directly responsible for the "6. 17" incident, decided to remove his position as the Standing Committee of Shishou Municipal Committee. Shishou Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China made a decision to remove the secretary of the Political and Legal Committee of Shishou Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China in Tang Dynasty and the secretary of the Party Committee of Shishou Municipal Public Security Bureau, and at the same time requested the Standing Committee of Shishou Municipal People's Congress to remove him from the post of director of Shishou Municipal Public Security Bureau. Shishou, Hubei province, which became the focus of Chinese people's attention because of the "617" mass incident, was eventually exempted from both the secretary of the municipal party Committee and the standing Committee of the municipal party Committee. This kind of treatment has finally made this group event, which ranked at the bottom and scored the worst in the ranking of local response to online public opinion in the first half of 2009 published by People's Daily, give an account to the society. In the past two years, the incidents of high-profile accountability and low-key comeback of problem officials have been frequently exposed and criticized. Officials who are held accountable will come out quietly in the changes of the times, and accountability will become "a thing of the past", and "accountability" will lose its credibility. However, Xinhua believes that the accountability of Shishou's "6. 17" incident will not be "asked". Because, the Interim Provisions on Implementing the Accountability of Leading Cadres of the Party and Government issued on July 12, 2009 clearly pointed out: "Leading cadres of the Party and Government who take the blame for resigning, are ordered to resign, or are dismissed shall not be restored to their leading positions equivalent to their original positions within one year."