The work must pivot its core focus from “handling violations” to “prevention early and from afar,” combining administrative inspection with specialised thematic inspection and merging on-site checks with digital data analysis, the Party leader added.
He stated that inspection is no longer just a tool for detecting wrongdoings, it is an institution that fosters transparency, promotes innovation, and safeguards social stability and public trust. A sound governance system requires a robust oversight mechanism, and the inspection sector is the pillar of this structure.
Every inspection must serve a dual purpose: early detection of wrongdoings to protect public assets and simultaneously facilitating the resolution of difficulties for organisations, businesses, and people, the Party chief noted.
Inspection must be one step ahead, providing early forecasts and warnings of risks, and preventing small breaches from accumulating into major violations, he said.
General Secretary Lam stressed that all inspection activities must be objective, impartial, and transparent, adhering to the motto: “No forbidden zones, no exceptions, but also no extremism or formalism.”
Finally, General Secretary Lam urged the sector to coordinate closely with agencies of internal affairs to ensure synchronicity and effectiveness. He expressed his confidence that, through concerted efforts, the inspection sector will continue its glorious tradition and make worthy contributions to building a clean, legal, and development-facilitating State.

