Former deputy head of China Tobacco sentenced to 12 years for bribery

In a significant ruling against corruption, Zhang Tianfeng, former deputy director of China’s State Tobacco Monopoly Administration, has been sentenced to 12 years imprisonment for accepting bribes exceeding 34 million yuan ($4.98 million). The Ganzhou Intermediate People’s Court in Jiangxi province delivered the verdict on Thursday, additionally imposing a 2 million yuan fine and ordering confiscation of all illicit gains to be transferred to the state treasury.

Judicial investigations revealed that between 2004 and 2023, Zhang systematically exploited his official positions to provide unlawful advantages to various entities and individuals. His corrupt activities encompassed project contracts, recruitment processes, position adjustments, and career advancements, with bribes totaling over 34.07 million yuan.

The court determined that Zhang’s conduct unequivocally constituted bribery offenses warranting severe punishment. However, the sentence reflected some leniency due to mitigating factors including his voluntary disclosure of numerous bribery cases previously unknown to investigators, his full confession, and proactive restitution of illegal proceeds.

Zhang’s career spanned decades within tobacco monopoly bureaus in Shaanxi province and Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region before his 2017 appointment to the national administration. He served as deputy director from February 2020 until June 2023. His downfall began with a January 2025 investigation, followed by expulsion from the Communist Party of China six months later. After November 2025 indictment on bribery charges, his case received public trial on January 8 leading to this week’s sentencing.