The deputy chief of China's top securities regulator has been sacked, the government said today, a month after he was put under investigation and as probes into the financial sector deepen.
Yao Gang, vice chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), who first came under suspicion of "severe disciplinary violations" in November, was "dismissed" from his post, China's state council, or the cabinet, said in a statement on its website.
Disciplinary violation normally refers to graft.
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Another top CSRC official, assistant chairman Zhang Yujun, was removed from his post in late September on similar accusations.
Several securities firms and executives have also come under suspicion.
After conducting internal graft investigations, the Communist Party can punish alleged offenders internally or expel them and pass them onto courts for trial, where conviction is virtually guaranteed.