Tag: Bo Xilai

  • China Sex Tape, For A Change!

    Communist Countries, especially China, hides facts even of Natural Calamities like Earthquake toll, are now caught in IT Newsplosion.

    We, now  have scandals on embezzlement sex orgies surfacing(see my blogs under China).

    Story:

    Liu Zhijun,
    Liu Zhijun,

    Liu Zhijun, the disgraced minister of railways, was found to have embezzled $152 million and juggled 18 mistresses. But he was no match for Bo Xilai, the Chongqing party chief who fell from power early this year, who was rumored to have, through his wife, funneled over a $1 billion out of the country and kept as many as 100 mistresses.

    But unlike America, where a mistweeted cock shot can end a political career, for senior officials in China, sexual imprudence is almost always a coda to allegations of corruption. Only after an official’s political indiscretions are revealed do his personal indiscretions come to light.

    All that changed two week ago when a five-year-old sex tape of Beibei district party secretary Lei Zhengfu, yet another corrupt Chongqing official, was released online by Zhu Ruifeng, a private investigative journalist who runs a website aimed at exposing corruption.

    In the video, Lei, who looks like Jabba the Hutt’s semi-retarded cousin, flops around on top of his then 18-year-old mistress, which some media have identified as a woman named Zhao Hongxia, before dismounting and cleaning himself off. The sex tape was filmed with a hidden camera in Zhao’s purse and focuses on Lei’s bulbous undulations. It isn’t meant for anyone’s sexual enjoyment.

    In fact, the recording was commissioned by a real estate developer, who paid Zhao 300 yuan ($48) to tape her bang session with Lei. The developer then used the recording as leverage to blackmail the philandering official.

    At the time, Lei was defended by Wang Lijun, Bo Xilai’s venal police chief, who raided the developer’s house and found similar sex tapes implicating other high-level provincial officials. The developer was jailed for a year and each of the honey pots a month.

    But with Wang Lijun in jail for 15 years after running to the U.S. consulate and blowing the whistle on Bo in February, Lei was no longer protected. In early November, a source inside the Chongqing police leaked the videos to Zhu.

    Zhu says that the tapes show at least four other senior Chongqing officials doing their best Ray J. He also says he is being monitored and intimidated by Chongqing authorities, which is pretty standard when you antagonize everyone in the city with something to lose.

    Surprisingly, Zhu has been offered police protection by the Beijing Public Security Bureau. The state media has also tacitly supported his efforts.

    http://www.vice.com/read/china-gets-its-first-political-sex-tape-scandal

    There was a mere 63-hour interval between the appearance of a micro blog with a video link and corresponding still images showing Lei Zhengfu having sex with a teenage mistress to his dismissal from his position as a district Party chief in Chongqing.

    A lot happened in those dramatic hours. Lei at first denied the accusation and said the images were photoshopped, then he tried to negotiate with the source; local authorities launched a probe, confirmed the authenticity of the images and that Lei was the man in the video, then they announced his dismissal.

    We have seen this before. In September, micro blog posts showing Shaanxi official Yang Dacai wearing multiple luxury watches led to a corruption probe and his downfall. In October, a blog revealed Guangdong official Cai Bin had dozens of homes, which resulted in a probe.

    We cannot but be impressed by the efficiency the authorities have displayed in their response, particularly in Lei’s case. That is exactly what people want to see in the real-life struggle against corruption.

    Thanks to its democratic nature and incomparable efficiency and effectiveness in disseminating information, the Internet has become a popular platform where the otherwise voiceless can speak out. Rumors about Lei’s philandering and corruption have been around for years locally, but a probe had not been launched until the sex video was posted online, which is fresh evidence of the Web’s efficacy in prompting action.

    For its proven role in exposing corruption alone, the Internet is worth being embraced by the country’s corruption busters as a close ally. We have seen plenty of examples where online postings have pre-empted official discipline watchdogs and law-enforcement departments. The Internet has become a reliable last resort when people’s complaints about abuse are ignored.

    http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/opinion/2012-11/27/content_15961217.htm

     

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  • Lost $3.79 Trillion in Illicit Financial Outflow- China.

    The illicit making of money by a Class called Politicians are bleeding the Countries, irrespective of the Systems they follow.

    ChinaWen Jiabao’s familyand ,Bo Xilai have been caught and been disgraced.

    The implications of this is brought out by Global Financial integrity in its latest report.

    /ap885715062340.jpg?w=1024&h=737
    Bon voyage, billions! The wealth of Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao’s family includes lucrative cross-border investment.AP Photo/Andy Wong

    ‘ The bulk of its estimate, 86.2%, comes from alleged trade mispricing, as Chinese exporters massage reported sales figures with help from their foreign partners to hide profits abroad. But there are many ways for funds to find their way overseas, from art to gambling. Over the last six years, GFI believes some $596 billion in Chinese funds have been moved to tax havens.

    While GFI’s estimates are large, it’s clear this is a very real phenomenon: A more conservative figure for outflows from a Standard Chartered bank economist relying only on public data suggests that at least $71 billion left China just this past summer. Another recent estimate suggests some $225 billion left in the year leading up to September 2012(http://qz.com)

    Mispricing.

    default/files/imagecache/290-width/images/print-edition/20121027_CNC341.png
    Mispricing China.

     

    Global Financial Integrity (GFI), an American research group that campaigns against illicit financial flows, believes this mis-invoicing is rampant. In a new study Dev Kar and Sarah Freitas of GFI compared China’s reported exports to the world with the world’s stated imports from China. They also juxtaposed China’s purchases from the world, with the world’s exports to China. In principle the figures should match. But the two economists found huge discrepancies between them (see chart). If, as Mr Kar and Ms Freitas recommend, China’s trade with Hong Kong and Macau is excluded, the country appears to have understated its exports and overstated its imports by a combined $430 billion in 2011.

    These estimates are hard to take at face value. They imply that China’s true current-account surplus (which includes its trade surplus plus one or two other things) was almost 20% of GDP at its peak in 2007 (officially it was about 10%). But even if the figures are illustrative, rather than definitive, they highlight the difficulty of curbing the cross-border flow of capital in a country with such a heavy cross-border flow of goods.”(economist.com).

    Here is the Report fro GFI.

    Click the Link.

    http://www.gfintegrity.org/storage/gfip/documents/reports/ChinaOct2012/gfi-china-oct2012-report-web.pdf

     

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  • Karunanidhi of China, Wen Jiabao’s Family Tree,Wealth

    Please recollect whether  this reminds you of an Indian Political Family, though there are many who have amassed wealth by dubious means, one Family fits the Bill .

     

    /assets/image/2012/10/capture_decran_2012-10-26_a_09.25.55_0.png
    Wen Jiabao’s Family Wealth.

    DALIAN, China — Just a few weeks before his dramatic fall from power, Bo Xilai wrote an inscription in calligraphy, praising the Chongqing Water Assets Management Company, and urging support for its operations.
    What he did not say was that a foundation controlled by his younger brother, Bo Xicheng, had acquired a stake in a subsidiary of the water company.
    Mr. Bo had done something similar in 2003, while serving as governor here in Liaoning Province.
    He said his province would make supporting the Dalian Daxian company, a conglomerate engaged primarily in electronics manufacturing, one of the most important tasks of the next five years.
    A few years earlier, another company controlled by the same younger brother was listed as the owner of nearly a million shares in Dalian Daxian, worth about $1.2 million.
    It is not clear whether Mr. Bo knew of the indirect stakes in the companies, or whether his brother profited from his pronouncements.
    But now, in the aftermath of Mr. Bo’s dismissal, on suspicions of corruption and accusations that his wife arranged the killing of a British business associate, there are mounting questions about whether Mr. Bo, who was most recently the party chief in the city of Chongqing and a member of the Politburo, used his enormous political clout to enrich himself and his closest relatives.
    For much of the last decade, while Bo Xilai was busy moving up the ranks of the Communist Party, and even striking populist themes aimed at improving the lot of the poor, his relatives were quietly amassing a fortune estimated at more than $160 million.
    His elder brother accumulated millions of dollars’ worth of shares in one of the country’s biggest state-owned conglomerates.
    His sister-in-law owns a significant stake in a printing company she started that was recently valued at $400 million.
    And even Mr. Bo’s 24-year-old son, now studying at Harvard, got into business in 2010, registering a technology company with $320,000 in start-up capital.
    Bo Xilai’s downfall this spring has also cast a sharper spotlight on the hidden wealth and power accumulated by the Communist Party’s revolutionary families, and by the sons, daughters, wives and close relatives of the nation’s high-ranking leaders.
    “This could really open a can of worms,” says Bo Zhiyue, a senior fellow at the National University of Singapore’s East Asian Institute.
    “The relatives of other party leaders are also doing lots of business deals, and people will begin to ask: What about them? Was the Bo family the only one doing this kind of thing?”
    Mr. Bo was suspended from his Politburo position and his leadership of Chongqing, a large metropolis with province status, in recent weeks amid accusations that, among other things, he interfered with an investigation into the death of a Neil Heywood, a British businessman whose body was found in a Chongqing hotel room on Nov. 15.
    His death was initially attributed to alcohol poisoning.
    Mr. Bo’s wife, Gu Kailai, and Zhang Xiaojun, the family’s 32-year-old “orderly,” were named as the main suspects, with officials saying Ms. Gu and her son, Bo Guagua, had had a dispute with Mr. Heywood over “economic interests.”
    The case has also raised questions about how the Bo family was able to afford to send their only son to study in England at Harrow and Oxford University, as well as now at Harvard, for graduate school.
    State-run media reports have hinted at the possibility that the Bo family had been transferring illicit assets overseas.
    And soon after Mr. Bo was dismissed from his posts, Xu Ming, one of China’s wealthiest businessmen, with close ties to Mr. Bo and his family, was detained, possibly here in the city of Dalian, where Mr. Bo had once served as mayor.
    None of the extended family members have been accused of illegality.
    But the circumstances surrounding Mr. Bo’s actions in support of companies where family members had an interest suggest that he may have used his influence to help increase their wealth.
    Corporate records in Hong Kong and China show that the siblings of both Mr. Bo, who also served as commerce minister in the national government, and his wife have been exceptionally active for years in forming investment companies and setting up offshore entities.
    Moreover, sometimes Mr. Bo’s family members have held their stakes using an alias.
    Two of Ms. Gu’s sisters — Gu Wangjiang and Gu Wangning — have earned millions of dollars in publishing, real estate and other ventures.
    Together they own about $120 million worth of shares in the TungKong Security Printing Company in eastern China.
    The TungKong Web site says the company has contracts with some of China’s biggest state-owned enterprises and government agencies, including the tax authorities and the Central Bank.
    Gu Wangning also helped Bo Guagua establish a technology company in Beijing in 2010.
    The Guagua Technology Company’s supervisor is listed as Mr. Zhang, the Bo family aide accused along with Ms. Gu of being involved in Mr. Heywood’s death.
    Two of Bo Xilai’s three brothers are well-established businessmen with close ties to state companies.
    His elder brother, Bo Xiyong, 64, has invested over the years, according to Hong Kong records, in a series of offshore investment vehicles like Advanced Technology and Economic Development, partly owned by a British Virgin Islands entity, and Far Eastern Industries.
    But little about the companies is publicly available.
    Bo Xiyong is also vice chairman of China Everbright International, a division of the Everbright Group, a giant state-owned company.
    His annual salary is about $200,000 and his stake in the company during the past decade is about $10 million, based on shares he has sold and the value of his current stock options, according to public filings.
    In addition, Bo Xiyong is a deputy of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, a government advisory body, and until recently he served as deputy chairman of HKC Holdings, a Hong Kong company controlled by the family of an Indonesian billionaire.
    In 2010, the big American private equity firm TPG invested about $25 million in HKC, which specializes in infrastructure and alternative energy projects in China and has won numerous state contracts.
    Bo Xicheng, the younger brother with the foundation, has ties to several companies that operated in Dalian and Chongqing, the two cities where Bo Xilai served as a high-ranking official.
    His charitable foundation, the Beijing Xingda Educational Foundation, has on its board of directors the heads of two real estate developers, the Dalian Huanan Group and Chongqing Tianyou, as well as Weng Zhenjie, the chief executive of the Chongqing International Trust Company.
    Earlier this year, a Chongqing business tycoon, Zhang Mingyu, accused Bo Xilai’s police force of threatening him and protecting Mr. Weng, who Mr. Zhang said was a former business partner who had quarreled with him in Chongqing.
    Among the advisers to the foundation, which has already raised more than $20 million, are two academics from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences who publicly supported Bo Xilai’s “Chongqing model” of development.
    The foundation owns a $2 million stake in Chongqing Water Group, a company now valued at about $5 billion.
    Bo Xicheng has served as a director of several big state-owned companies, including Citic Securities, one of China’s largest investment houses.
    He is also the founder of a small company that makes fire extinguishers and other equipment, called Beijing Liuhean Firefighting Science and Technology, whose products are used in government agencies, luxury hotels, power plants and in Tiananmen Square in Beijing.
    Less is known about Bo Xilai’s wife, Gu Kailai, except that she opened her own law firm, with offices in various countries, and also set up several consulting firms with foreign businessmen.
    There is also a great deal of mystery about Mr. Bo’s son by his first marriage, Li Wangzhi.
    Like the children of so many high-ranking Chinese leaders, Mr. Li, 34, has worked in private equity and held a job at Citigroup.
    He invested in companies in Dalian, on his father’s turf, according to corporate filings.
    He has been known alternatively as Brendan Li and Li Xiaobai.

    http://chinhdangvu.blogspot.in/2012/04/as-china-official-rose-his-familys.html

    The Indian Family that come close to this is Karunanidhi.

    Read my blog Karunanidhi,Octopus of Indian Polity.Compare The Family Charts.

    http://ramanisblog.in/2011/03/27/karunanidhi-family-octopus-of-indian-politymedia/

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  • Interview with Security Apparatus in China? Video

    She should be happy she was not shot.

    As the National People’s Congress holds its annual session, Al Jazeera’s Melissa Chan went to the offices of lawyer Pu Zhiqiang to interview him about proposed changes to the Criminal Procedure Law. At the office, she encountered officers from the “guo bao” or State Security Police, who prevented her from proceeding with the interview. She writes:

    What happened next was not surprising, but on this day, felt particularly ironic: plainclothes police officers prevented us from interviewing Pu on camera, even as we explained to them that this new legislation would curtail their state security powers.

    The language used by the officers, who refused to identify themselves, might also be interesting to those unfamiliar with this kind of state apparatus: Orwellian, wrapped in code, and offering our crew “recommendations” that if disobeyed, could have meant some physical confrontation from the two men in sunglasses who were called up for reinforcement during the following exchange.

    She then recounts the exchange between herself, the officers [PO] and Pu Zhiqiang:

    AJE: This is a law about security, terrorism, and the handling of general criminal suspects. This law can be quite an improvement on things –

    PO: Yes! Indeed, it is a huge reform. It’s a big improvement.

    AJE: So … are you speaking in the capacity of a police officer?

    PO: No, I’m … speaking in the capacity … as Mr. Pu’s … friend!

    Pu Zhiqiang: You are not my friend. I adamantly, adamantly dispute that.

    Pu Zhiqiang has defended many high-profile activists and dissidents, including artist Ai Weiwei. He is now providing counsel for Zhang Mingyu, a Chongqing businessman who was detained in Beijing after writing on his blog that he has inside information about the current political intrigue involving Bo Xilai, Wang Lijun, and the Chongqing mafia. For more on Zhang Mingyu, see a post from the Committee to Protect Journalists. For more on recent harassment of foreign journalists, see reports from Tibetan areas of Sichuan and from the scene of protests in Panhe, Guangdong.

    http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2012/03/chatting-with-chinas-security-apparatus/

  • China’s Rules for Comments on the Web Weibo Reacts

    Keep your mouth and *** Shut is the Guide line.

    We should enrol the Services of ‘Anonymous’ to post comments in China.

    Source:

    As of April 5, the following search terms are blocked on  (not including the “search for user” function):

    Hot Keywords:

    • Xi Cannot-Comment [Xí Jìnpíng 习禁评] (a new online nickname for )
    • Political and Legislative Affairs Committee + training [Zhèngfǎwěi + péixùn 政法委+培训]
    • local Party committee  [dìfang dǎngwěi 地方党委] (From March 26 to 31, 462 local secretaries gathered for the first national Political and Legislative Affairs Committee Secretaries Training Program, on which Zhou Yongkang spoke and stressed Party’s leadership. His speech has then been interpreted in different ways and referred to the recent political rumors in China. )

    Others:

    • “HU Embroidered-Set” [HU Jǐntào HU锦套] (A popular nickname of  used by Chinese netizens to avoid censorship.)
    • “democratic freedom” [mínzhǔ zìyóu 民主自由]

    Re-Test [Bó Xīlái 薄熙来] (“” was once unblocked in CDT’s re-test on March 26, but it became blocked again during the April 5 test.)

    Note: All Chinese-language words are tested using simplified characters. The same terms in traditional characters occasionally return different results. Read the original post on CDT Chinese here.

    CDT Chinese runs a project that crowd-sources  on  search. CDT independently tests the keywords before posting them, but some searches later become accessible again. We welcome readers to contribute to this project so that we can include the most up-to-date information.

    http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2012/04/sensitive-words-xi-cannot-comment-and-more/

    China site's response to censorship
    Weibo Responds to internet Censorship

    Related :

    Chinese netizens are quick to express their opinions on the new order on Sina Weibo and Tencent microblogging services that outlaws commenting, a key feature of the popular services. Below are three cartoons being spread around Chinese cyberspace. To read more from Chinese netizens on this issue, seeCDT Chinese.

    Hey, so banning comments can prevent the spread of rumors?”

    “Of course not. They just want you to know who the real boss is.”

    http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2012/03/sina-weibo-no-comment/