China Sweeps Cultural Heritage Sector in Widening Anti-Graft Crackdown
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A high-profile scandal involving the illicit sale of a masterpiece scroll by insiders at one of China’s top museums has prompted Beijing to launch a sweeping nationwide audit of state-owned antiquities, as a widening anti-graft dragnet sweeps through the country's cultural heritage sector.
On April 1, the National Cultural Heritage Administration (NCHA) announced a yearlong, centralized campaign to meticulously inventory state-owned museum holdings and eradicate security vulnerabilities. Following a national teleconference, the agency directed museums to piece-by-piece verify their physical assets against official ledger records, aiming to establish a standardized, institutionalized system for collection management. The initiative will simultaneously act as a pilot for China’s second national census of movable cultural relics.
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- Nanjing Museum scandal: Illicit sale of "Jiangnan Chun" scroll and 4 paintings; 29 implicated, 24 investigated including ex-director Xu Huping.
- NCHA launches yearlong nationwide audit of state-owned museum holdings from April 1 to verify assets and fix vulnerabilities.
- Broader anti-graft campaign ousts leaders like Wang Yamin (Palace Museum, 2024) and others up to 2026.
- Leshan Giant Buddha Tourism Investment Group
- Kang Xiaoming (former general manager) and Du Hua (former chairman) of the Leshan Giant Buddha Tourism Investment Group were caught in China's anti-corruption dragnet in March 2024 and February 2025, respectively.
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