CCP General Secretary
Jiang Zemin initiated the
Second Strike Hard campaign in 1996, and third Strike Hard campaign in 2001. In 2001, the state newspaper the ''
People's Daily'' reported multiple cases of execution of gangsters and individuals involved in organized crime, specifically in cases of robberies, kidnapping, blackmail, drug trafficking. Jiang's successor
Hu Jintao initiated a fourth Strike Hard Against Crime Campaign in (2010). This was followed by the
Strike Hard Campaign Against Violent Terrorism campaign in
Xinjiang, involving the detention of millions of
Uyghurs, political and religious repression, and widespread dissemination of surveillance within the region. Under the anti-corruption campaign launched under
CCP general secretary Xi Jinping, a parallel campaign has been operating since 2013 against organized crime and local party officials who shelter criminal networks and criminal groups. In July 2021, the
South China Morning Post reported that
Chen Yixin, secretary general of the
Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission, stated that the new "strike hard" campaign against organized crime in 2018 would target the telecoms, resources, transport and construction sectors, industries in which rent seeking and corruption are known to take place in China. The campaign was originally meant to run for three years, but in March 2021,
Guo Shengkun,
party secretary of the commission, said the campaign would continue as it had "won the people's support" for cleaning up the grass roots governance system (referring to residential communities in cities and villages in rural areas). ==See also==