BEIJING: China has expelled nine military officials from its parliament, including several generals of the army’s strategic missile unit, in a sweeping reshuffle following the appointment of a new defence minister.
The decision, announced late on Friday (Dec 29) by the state news agency Xinhua came after a meeting of the Central Committee of the ruling Communist Party.
No explanation was given for the officials’ removal.
Their removal is one of a series of high-level restructuring moves in the military establishment since defence minister Li Shangfu was abruptly sacked in October following months of speculation about his whereabouts.
Appointed in March, Li disappeared from public view in August before being formally dismissed in October.
On Friday, Beijing appointed Dong Jun as the new defence minister, ending a months-long vacancy in the strategic post.
Recent months have also seen an overhaul in the leadership of China’s secretive Rocket Force, the army unit that oversees Beijing’s nuclear arsenal, following media reports of a corruption probe involving its former chief.
Among the nine dismissed are five past or current top commanders of the PLA Rocket Force and a former Air Force commander, according to the South China Morning Post.
It added that two served in equipment development departments, including for the Central Military Commission (CMC), while one was a naval commander.
The CMC is the top military command body in China’s political hierarchy and is chaired by President Xi Jinping.
The nine officials sat in parliament as non-elected representatives.
Their dismissal “suggests that those officers are being probed and confirms some of the rumours circulating on the topic”, says US-based SinoInsider, a firm specialising in Chinese politics.