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Ex-PLA chief to be prosecuted for allegedly accepting bribes for promotion

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Ex-PLA chief Guo Boxiong to be prosecuted for allegedly accepting bribes for promotions

The former vice-chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission is the most senior military official to be investigated for corruption in the ongoing anti-graft campaign

PUBLISHED : Thursday, 30 July, 2015, 10:12pm
UPDATED : Friday, 31 July, 2015, 10:06pm

Li Jing and Minnie Chan

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Guo Boxiong was one of the vice-chairmen of China's powerful Central Military Commission. Photo: EPA

Guo Boxiong, a former vice-chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission, has been expelled from the Communist Party for alleged corruption and handed over to military prosecutors, state media reported late Thursday night.

Investigations found Guo allegedly accepted bribes “personally and through his family members” in exchange for granting promotions in the military, Xinhua reported, citing the Politburo. The announcement came ahead of the People’s Liberation Army’s anniversary tomorrow.

The report said that in line with party disciplinary rules, the Central Committee decided on April 9 to put Guo under investigation. “His acts seriously violated party discipline and left a vile impact,” the Politburo said.

Guo is the most senior military official to be investigated for corruption in the ongoing anti-graft campaign. His expulsion comes more than a year after the downfall of former top general Xu Caihou, who was also a vice-chairman of the commission under former president Hu Jintao.

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Xu died of bladder cancer in March, but military prosecutors had said they would continue to go after other allegedly corrupt officers linked to Xu. During Hu’s administration, Xu and Guo were in charge of the PLA even though the president was nominally the head of the CMC.

The South China Morning Post reported in April that top authorities decided to launch an investigation into Guo and briefed serving top brass on Guo’s alleged wrongdoings.

Xinhua said the probe into Guo showed President Xi Jinping’s “political resolution” to rule the party and army with strict discipline, and determination to root out corruption within the party and army.

A commentary on a military-affiliated website said Guo’s behaviour had tarnished the reputation of the army and the party, and the announcement against him showed that authorities were determined to crack down on corruption.

State media reported in March that Guo’s son, Major General Guo Zhenggang, 45, was detained in a graft probe, amid Xi’s high-profile crackdown on corruption in the PLA.

Guo’s younger brother was also in the spotlight in May after graft-busters in Shaanxi province uncovered misuse of disaster relief funds at the civil affairs bureau headed by the brother. The bureau, led by Guo Boquan, misappropriated more than 89 million yuan (HK$113 million) in funds originally allocated for a disaster recovery centre. Some of the money was used to build cheap flats to sell to staff and public servants in other departments, provincial graft-busters said.

A retired officer from the Guangzhou Military Command told the South China Morning Post that the timing of the announcement on the eve of the PLA’s anniversary would help Xi raise morale in the military.

Hong Kong-based military observer Liang Guoliang said the Politburo’s strong condemnation of Guo stressed that no one was exempt from punishment. “Xi wants to use Guo’s case to further consolidate his personal prestige in the army, which will pave the way for him to carry out political reform in the army.”



 

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Guo Boxiong tried to flee China in women's clothing


Staff Reporter
2015-08-01

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Guo Boxiong, left, and vice chairman of the CMC Xu Qiliang. (Photo/CNS)

Retired vice chair of China's Central Military Commission (CMC) Guo Boxiong reportedly boarded an airplane in women's clothing in an attempt to leave the country and avoid arrest in July last year, but his plan was foiled after Beijing learned of his attempt and grounded all planes, reports our Chinese-language sister paper China Times.

Guo has been expelled from the Communist Party of China (CPC) and his case was transferred to military prosecutors, it was announced on July 30 of this year.

He allegedly decided to flee after another vice chair of the CMC, Xu Caihou, was arrested in March last year. Guo reportedly sought help from Chen Hongyan, then vice chief of the Beijing Military Region's political department, Wang Sheng, head of the PLA Air Force's logistic department and Liu Zirong, the then vice director of the national-level office controlling China's airspace.

At round 6am on July 15, 2014, Guo, who was reportedly wearing women's clothing and a wig, took a flight from Beijing Capital International Airport to Shanghai Pudong International Airport. He planned to take another flight from Shanghai to leave the country.

However, an official of the Air Traffic Management Bureau discovered Guo's plan and reported it to Chinese president Xi Jinping, who ordered anti-graft chief Wang Qishan to shut down 12 airports in north and eastern China, which affected hundreds of planes, to prevent Guo from escaping.

Guo, who is said to have already been on board a plane at the Shanghai airport, was reportedly shocked when police boarded the plane to detain him. Guo has reportedly been detained since.

Liu, one of the three people said to have facilitated Guo's plan, jumped to his death in February this year while the remaining two, Chen and Wang, are being investigated by police.

While Guo's son and Zhejiang military region political commissar Guo Zhenggang, have been under a corruption probe since Feb. 10.

The commissar reportedly used his father's influence to secure bids for shopping mall Hangzhoug Rui Fang United Market and Hangzhou China Wujin Machinery and Electronic City, which were built on military land in 2007. His wife Wu Fangfang made 1.5 billion yuan (US$241 million) from renting the two malls to tenants over a period of five years until Guo Zhenggang was put under the probe and could no longer fund the two malls.


 
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