China removes 3 lawmakers with defence-sector ties after top general probed

China removes 3 lawmakers with defence-sector ties after top general probed

By Colleen Howe and Ethan Wang

Reuters FILE PHOTO: Chinese President Xi Jinping stands in a car to review the troops during a military parade to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two, in Beijing, China, September 3, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo FILE PHOTO: Members of Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) Navy march during the rehearsal ahead of a military parade to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two, in Beijing, China, September 3, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo

FILE PHOTO: Chinese President Xi Jinping reviews troops in Beijing

BEIJING, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Three Chinese lawmakers with ties to the defence sector have been removed from their positions, state media said in ​the wake of an investigation of the nation's top general, just as Beijing tries ‌to modernise its military.

The announcement on Wednesday evening by the Xinhua news agency did not give a reason for the ‌dismissals or say that the lawmakers, who are from the defence, aerospace and nuclear industries, were under investigation.

In President Xi Jinping's years-long corruption purge, the defence ministry said on January 24 it was investigating General Zhang Youxia - second only to Xi in China's military leadership - over suspected "serious violations of discipline and law".

The ⁠probe of Zhang, seen as a ‌top Xi ally, meant the U.S. lost a respected, well-known contact within China's military as successive U.S. administrations have worked to build senior-level ties to ‍avoid mishaps between the world's two most powerful militaries.

The sacked lawmakers are Zhou Xinmin, the former head of state-owned conglomerate Aviation Industry Corp of China, which produces most of China's military aircraft and drones, longtime nuclear-weapons researcher ​Liu Cangli and Luo Qi, chief engineer of state-owned nuclear-power giant China National Nuclear Corp.

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The provincial ‌governments responsible for the lawmakers' dismissals did not immediately respond to faxed requests for comment.

The dismissals were announced a month before China's legislature, the National People's Congress, convenes for its yearly meeting, marking the start of a five-year planning cycle for the ruling Communist Party.

Xi wants China, the world's biggest military spender after the United States, to achieve what he calls full military modernisation by 2035, ⁠although the U.S. Pentagon has said that corruption in ​the military's ranks could be impeding progress toward that goal.

Zhou ​was named AVIC chairman in March 2024, but his name is no longer on the company's website. The day before his removal, AVIC held a meeting on ‍anti-corruption, the company said ⁠on social media. Zhou is also a former top executive at Shanghai-based planemaker COMAC.

Former AVIC head Tan Ruisong was expelled from the party for corruption in February 2025.

Liu ran the ⁠China Academy of Engineering Physics from 2015 to 2024 and had long conducted nuclear weapons research, according to his biography ‌on the website of the Chinese Society of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics.

(Reporting by Colleen ‌Howe and Ethan Wang; Editing by William Mallard)

 

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