With 78 million members, the CPC has set supervision institutions from top to bottom to ensure compliance with discipline. They are also trying to nurture an anti-corruption awareness in communities, schools and homes, in addition to governments and enterprises.
"The body attaches importance to average citizens in battling corruption," said Xu Bin, an official with CCDI, citing citizens' hotline calls, online reporting complaints and letters as well as face-to-face talks at CCDI.
Turkish Ambassador to China Murat Salim Esenli said he was most interested in what China's top leaders think about corruption, and he found that China adopted different, targeted policies at different periods.
"China has been taking increasingly effective measures and making progress in dealing with corruption," the ambassador said.
China is also boosting international exchange and cooperation in the area of anti-corruption. The CCDI Supervision Department has established friendly relations with nearly 80 countries and regions.
It signed cooperation agreements with administrative inspection and anti-corruption authorities in Egypt, Poland and Russia and set up a regular consultation mechanism with the U.S..