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to Chinese news reports. A Ministry of Education press officer confirmed to state-run China Central Television that the administrator, Cai Rongsheng, was under
with a fake passport. A university spokesman told the newspaper that Mr. Cai had run into unspecified legal problems but denied that Mr. Cai had attempted to flee.
“What is certain is that Cai Rongsheng was responsible for admissions at a famous university, and his being investigated again shows the problem of corruption in the field of academia,” read a commentary in The Qilu Evening News, a newspaper based in the eastern city of Jinan. “If power doesn’t have any sort of controls, then corruption will become ubiquitous, and the so-called ‘ivory
The ivory towers of universities might seem like a refuge from the woes of the world, and, in China, from rampant corruption. But the recent detention of a senior university official has tarnished the image of the campus. Cai Rongsheng, 48, head of the admissions office of the Renmin University of China (RUC), is under investigation for taking bribes, reports said.
Yet Cai is just one of many college officials brought down for corruption. The public is wondering: Are schools places of learning, or are they about turning a buck?
Pay to studyCai, who took the charge of student enrollment, was detained when trying to use a fake passport to flee abroad from Shenzhen airport in Guangdong Province, the Beijing-based Legal Mirror reported on November 27.
The university did not detail the reasons of Cai"s detention, and nor did the Ministry of Education. Media outlets, such as Legal Mirror, have said that Cai is linked to large-scale corruption cases involving bribes in return for enrolling particular students.
The China Youth Daily reported Saturday that the RUC has required its senior officials to hand in their passports following Cai"s detention and insiders at the university said that more people involved in the case will be probed.
Cai was a professor in economics in the university and was fulsomely praised on the RUC website. He also held concurrent positions on the board of at least seven corporations, Caixin magazine reported.
An anonymous staff member from the RUC told the China Youth Daily that Cai was a show-off and often drove a BMW on campus. The media has reported that many online posts since 2010 have accused Cai of taking advantage of the independent enrollment system to take bribes.