• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Serious Super Chio ATB Fan BingBing Made Disappeared by Communist Party

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal
Has China's most famous actress been disappeared by the Communist Party?
180914144210-fan-bingbing-photo-illustration-tease-medium-plus-169.jpg

(CNN) — Imagine if one day Jennifer Lawrence was walking the red carpet in Los Angeles and the next she vanished completely with no word about where she was.
It might sound ludicrous, or terrifying, but it's the reality in China, where one of the country's most famous actresses has disappeared without a trace amid an uproar over tax evasion by celebrities.
Fan Bingbing, one of China's highest-paid and most bankable stars, has appeared in both Chinese and Western films, including the multimillion-dollar X-Men franchise.
Across the country, her face once adorned thousands of advertisements, her star power used to sell a galaxy of luxury brands, from Cartier to Louis Vuitton. She was a regular sight at major award shows and fashion ceremonies. In 2015, Time Magazine named her China's "most famous actress."
But the film star hasn't been seen in public since early June, when, according to a post on her verified social-media account, she went to visit a children's hospital in Tibet.

In an article by state media Securities Daily on September 6, which was later deleted, the publication said Fan had been brought "under control and about to receive legal judgment."
No official statement has been made as to Fan's whereabouts, or any potential criminal charges against the actress.
However, in a country where top celebrities are forced to keep an inoffensive public profile to stay in the Chinese government's good graces, people have drawn their own conclusions about the actress' location.

"If you are a billionaire, then that is something that obviously you can enjoy to a certain extent, but you've got to be very, very wary that you don't at any stage cross a red line of some sort and fall afoul of the Chinese Communist Party," Fergus Ryan, a cyber analyst with the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, told CNN.
In 2011, the country's best-known artist, Ai Weiwei, was detained for almost three months during which time his whereabouts were unclear. He was later released after he signed a confession authorities described as being related to tax evasion.
180914111535-02-fan-bingbing-medium-plus-169.jpg

Fan Bingbing and Hugh Jackman arrive at the Australian premiere of 'X-Men: Days of Future Past" on May 16, 2014 in Melbourne, Australia.
Yin yang contracts
Fan's purported problems began when alleged copies of a film contract she had signed were leaked onto China's social media in late May.
According to state tabloid Global Times, she had two different contracts, one for tax purposes saying she was paid $1.5 million (10 million yuan) and a separate, private contract for $7.5 million (50 million yuan).
It's a practice known in China as "yin-yang contracts," a form of tax evasion where the first, smaller contract is reported to authorities while the second, larger one is treated as tax-free income.
The man behind the leak, Chinese TV host Cui Yongyuan, apologized in June to Fan for his actions, but the same month the State Administration of Taxation of China urged investigators to look into allegations of yin-yang contracts in the country's film industry.
180914173057-02-fan-bingbing-medium-plus-169.jpg

US actor Will Smith (L) and Chinese actress Fan Bingbing pose as they arrive on May 23, 2017 at the Cannes Film Festival in France.
Fan's team issued a furious denial at the time but the actress hasn't been seen in public since the dispute.

In September, China's Peking University released a report, lauded as the first "in the world" and heavily promoted in Chinese state media, which ranked the country's stars by their level of "social responsibility." Fan was ranked last, with a score of 0 out of 100.
A producer with a major Chinese studio told CNN the practice of having two contracts, one of them smaller to avoid paying too much tax, was "universal" in the film industry.
He said everyone was worried following Fan's disappearance, especially because "almost every contract has some irregularities" and won't stand up to a serious audit.
Like other industry insiders CNN spoke to, he declined to be named due to the political sensitivity of the topic.
Scaring celebrities into line
Jonathan Landreth, former Beijing-based Asia editor for the Hollywood Reporter and longtime observer of China's entertainment industry, told CNN the Chinese Communist Party was treading a tricky line, keen to use high-profile celebrities to sell the "Chinese Dream," but not wanting to promote the stark income divide.
"Maybe this is just scaring folk to ... start paying taxes. If someone were to get busted, then I think it would send a ripple effect to how film production goes forward in the coming years," Landreth said.







Play Video


Related Video: China steps up censorship on the Internet 02:37
An executive in a foreign film studio's China office told CNN the lack of A-list celebrities in China increased the bargaining power and earnings of a lucky few -- high-profile performers like Fan.

But while cracking down on them might solve other problems, she said it wouldn't help address the fundamental lack of talent across the Chinese film and television industries.
Combined with strict ideological control, such measures act only to create a "sad situation" in China's creative industry, she said.
The controls, though, can only go so far. The Chinese government needs the high-profile celebrities to help drive commerce, both domestically and internationally, to promote China, said Landreth.
The crackdown may in fact be intended to solve a different problem facing authorities. "It has long been an open secret that a movie budget is a great place to hide money," said Landreth.
The Communist Party's leadership may hope that by shining a light on celebrity tax avoidance, it could deflect attention and avoid closer public scrutiny of the rumored corruption among top government officials and their families, Landreth told CNN.
Spreading 'positive energy'
The Chinese Communist Party has long had an uncomfortable relationship with celebrities.
In recent years, state media has called on celebrities to spread "positive energy" on the internet. The threat of career-ending trouble with authorities has led the country's stars to pay attention to the party's wishes.

Related Article: China WhatsApp crackdown only scratches surface of worsening internet censorship


The result is a celebrity culture that has less in common with the salacious and controversial Hollywood familiar to the Western world. In China, celebrities often try to keep their reputations' positive and inoffensive.
Australian analyst Ryan said when he lived in China, he worked with the publicity team for Chinese actress and singer Li Bingbing.
He encouraged Li to become more involved with environmental causes, including the United Nations Environment Program.
But Ryan said the team would never choose a cause, or take up a fight that was ahead of what the Communist Party was comfortable with, especially if it opposed current government policy.
"You would be foolish to go out ahead of the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese authorities on issues and lead the way," he said.
Despite the speculation and the concern, Ryan said it was possible the explanation for Fan's disappearance was actually very simple.
"She possibly did something wrong ... the evidence was put out there for all to see, I guess, in a way that put the authorities in a position where they had to come down hard on her," he said.
 

batman1

Alfrescian
Loyal
THE CCP can make u rich today and they also can destroy u tomorrow.The people are forced to be beholden to the CCP.
Ditto the sinkees are compelled to be beholden to the MIW.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
I said b4 she must have done something to upset the commies...tax evasion is too simple an excuse..n the real reason is Tibet..
 

AhMeng

Alfrescian (Inf- Comp)
Asset
I am more interested whether Osim signed an Yinyang contract with her when she was the advertising for Osim .... Ummmmm :biggrin:
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
I hope the commies pulled out her fingernails and twisted her nipples until they extracted a confession from her. She needs to pay up whatever tax she cheated from over 1 billion chinks.
 

AhMeng

Alfrescian (Inf- Comp)
Asset
I hope the commies pulled out her fingernails and twisted her nipples until they extracted a confession from her. She needs to pay up whatever tax she cheated from over 1 billion chinks.
On behalf of her arch enemy and my fave ATB actress 白百何, I agree :biggrin:
 

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal
I hope the commies pulled out her fingernails and twisted her nipples until they extracted a confession from her. She needs to pay up whatever tax she cheated from over 1 billion chinks.

Better suggest to Commie to throw her into cell full of Bangla tio gang rape, fate worst than death.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
What happened to Fan Bingbing? Beloved Chinese actor missing without a trace
THIS actor has over 65 million followers, and has starred with Hugh Jackman. Three months ago, she vanished without a trace.


Gavin Fernando
@GavinDFernando
d38351ee060068023d046fbead7c02f3

news.com.auSEPTEMBER 16, 20183:31PM


Play
Mute

0:10
/
1:02
Loaded: 0%

Progress: 0%
Fullscreen
These Are The Highest Paid Actresses In Hollywood

origin:video_integrator.szN3A0dzoR6fGoPdvesJ8pTML_IxLHSp

SHE’S one of China’s most beloved actors, boasting an impressive film career and a combined social media following of over 65 million people.
But in early July, she disappeared without a trace, sparking rumours she had been detained by her country’s authoritarian government.
Now brands she represents are pulling their support for her, authorities are refusing to divulge information on her whereabouts, and her millions of fans keep asking the same question: What happened to Fan Bingbing?
And more importantly, how does a world-renowned film star just vanish into thin air?
WHAT HAPPENED TO FAN BINGBING?
Fan Bingbing is one of China’s most revered actors.
The 36-year-old has starred in over 50 films — both Chinese and Western — including Iron Man 3 and X-Men: Days Of Future Past.
She will also star in the upcoming film 355 alongside Penelope Cruz, Jessica Chastain and Lupita Nyong’o, appearing alongside them in Cannes in May to promote it.
69b261d2f99f3d1fd6cc3ddb1a95a09c

Fan Bingbing appearing alongside Hugh Jackman and Peter Dinklage in May.Source:News Corp Australia
But for three months and counting, the glamorous star has not been seen in public.


She has a whopping 3.8 million Instagram followers, but hasn’t posted to that or her Twitter account since roughly mid-May.
Most Western social media platforms are banned in China, but despite having more than 62 million followers on Weibo — the Chinese equivalent of Twitter — Fan hasn’t been active there in recent months either.
On May 24, a promotional video she recorded for De Beers was posted on YouTube — this was one of her final sponsored public appearances.
Her last documented appearance was July 1, when she visited a children’s hospital.
And now? Nothing. It’s as if she’s dropped off the face of the Earth.
348c09f55d47810dc4a4687e2e550cc3

Fan Bingbing hasn’t been seen in public since the start of July.Source:Getty Images
Little is known about what happened to the superstar, but some speculative reports say it relates to a government investigation into tax evasion in the film industry earlier this year.
In May, prominent retired Chinese TV presenter Cui Yongyuan appeared to accuse Fan of not paying her taxes.
According to The New York Times, the anchor posted two contracts for an upcoming film Fan was starring in. One allegedly showed a salary of $1.6 million to be reported to the tax authorities, while another revealed an actual payment of $7.8 million.
The outlet notes that dual contracts — also known as “yin and yang” contracts — are widespread across many industries in China, as a way to avoid paying taxes; the star receives one contract which is their actual salary, and a second contract with a lower wage number to submit to tax authorities.
Cui’s accusation prompted authorities to launch a broad inquiry into the entertainment industry.
“If violations of tax laws and regulations are found, they will be handled in strict accordance with the law,” his post warned.
However, it did not mention Fan by name, and the actor denied accusations of tax evasion.
The Chinese Government announced a crackdown on payments to film stars, capping pay-offs with leading actors at no more than 40 per cent of total production costs.
State-run Chinese publication Securities Daily subsequently claimed the star had been placed “under control, and will accept the legal decision” handed down by authorities.
In a now-deleted article, the outlet said her alleged tax evasion was just “the tip of the iceberg”, saying: “She is also suspected of participating in illegal lending and other forms of corruption. In the worst case, she faces legal punishment.”
d229dd73e4629f5d1fa9f489f149ba79

How did one of China’s most beloved stars just vanish?Source:AFP
To make things worse, the actor received a score of 0 out of 100 on the recently released China Film and Television Star Social Responsibility Report, a joint survey by a Beijing university and a state-affiliated Chinese institution that monitors celebrities as part of a wider government crackdown on “promoting money worship” and “distorting social values”.
The Chinese Communist Party may have used the downfall of Fan, with her immense wealth and status, to send a message to the wider entertainment industry and to reinforce the country’s socialist principles.
Following the actor’s apparent fall from grace, several local and international brands she represents have sought to distance themselves from her
One of these is Australian health company Swisse Wellness, which announced it would be suspending the use of her name, Fairfax Media reported earlier this week.
“We have suspended using her image alongside our brand. As such we are unsure on her involvement in our Singles Day activity,” a spokeswoman for the company said. “We are continuing to monitor the situation and hope that it is resolved in the near future.”
Other international companies, including German accessories brand Montblanc, have also pulled support for her.
74ac3c9b31cb840180c9593940c1a3ac

A number of international brands, including Australian company Swisse Wellness, have suspended use of Fan’s name.Source:Getty Images
Still, it must be stressed that reports of Fan’s detainment are speculative.
There are additional suggestions the actor fled to Los Angeles seeking asylum. According to Hollywood Reporter, a Hong Kong tabloid alleged that the star had been spotted at an LA immigration office.
The report cited an unnamed “industry source” who claimed Fan was seeking advice from Jackie Chan, who had urged her to seek asylum in the US.
These reports have not been confirmed, but one thing is certain — Fan remains nowhere to be seen.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Back Yahoo
Style Cover

Get lifestyle content, straight to your inbox
China's Most Famous Actress Fan Bingbing Reportedly Missing for Three Months
Shannon Barbour
Shannon Barbour
Cosmopolitan18 September 2018 1:00 am GMT+8
Photo credit: Anadolu Agency - Getty Images
Photo credit: Anadolu Agency - Getty Images
From Cosmopolitan

While celebrity conspiracy theories are never in short supply, they're often dubious and quite farfetched. However, the latest one seems to have some merit and is prompting people to question why exactly one of China's most famous actresses, Fan Bingbing, hasn't been seen in more than three months.


The X-Men: Days of Future Past and Iron Man 3 actress was reportedly last seen on July 1 at a children's hospital, and her 63 million followers on her Sina Weibo account, which is similar to Twitter, haven't heard from her since July 23. In multiple reports, all requests for comment from Fan and her team were unsuccessful.

At one point, Fan, who turned 37 on Sunday, was the fifth highest paid actress in the world and earned $17 million in 2016. Though, it is speculated that her income is the source of her mysterious disappearance.

In May, CCTV presenter Cui Yongyuan leaked two of Fan's "yin-yang" movie contracts. Reportedly, one contract showed what Fan actually earned ($7.8 million) and the other one ($1.6 million) was a lower number that was to be submitted to the tax authorities, which Fan's representatives have previously denied. While this is a common practice among many industries in China, the presenter then called on the Chinese authorities to "step up regulations on show business."

Without mentioning Fan, the State Administration of Taxation stated, "If violations of tax laws and regulations are found, they will be handled in strict accordance with the law."

The tax investigation was opened in the Jiangsu province, where Fan's film studio is based, but her studio has denied everything. Chinese officials haven't confirmed if she is under investigation or not.

According The New York Times, Fan hasn't been charged for any crimes, but her professional partnerships and upcoming movie projects are suffering. She was set to star in the Unbreakable Spirit movie with Bruce Willis, but her name has since been removed from the movie posters, and her role in another unspecified film has been edited out. A Thailand duty free store and brands such as Montblanc and Swisse Wellness, announced they will no longer use Fan's name and have terminated her contract.

Despite her previous charity work and founding an organization to help children in Tibet who have heart disease, a Chinese university put Fan in last place on their 2017-2018 China Film and Television Star Social Responsibility Report.

Since the news of the investigation was reported, there have been rumors that Fan was arrested, detained, or has possibly even left China.

As a result of the investigation, the country has imposed limits on how much actors can earn. Reportedly, actors cannot earn more than 70 percent of the whole cast or more than 40 percent of the production costs, which is said to be an effort to prevent "distorting social values" and reinforce "core socialist values."

Fan, who is set to star in the upcoming 355 movie along with Penelope Cruz and Luptia Nyong'o, reportedly was placed "under control" by Chinese authorities and was said to "accept the legal decision," but that report has since been retracted and Fan's whereabouts remain unknown.

('You Might Also Like',)

How Kendall and Ariana Use Lip Liner to Fake a Fuller Pout

The 8 Best Clarifying Shampoos for Getting Rid of Product Buildup

Here's How to Flawlessly Conceal Your Acne


What to read next
Jennifer Lopez's peach swimsuit leaves fans speechless

Yahoo7 Be
Murdoch rewards Year 12 students with an 80+ ATAR

Murdoch University
Sponsored

Phoebe Burgess breaks silence following sexting scandal

Yahoo7 Be
Woman leaves husband after discovering his cruel nickname for her

Yahoo7 Be
Aussie Handmaid's Tale star leads Emmys glam

Signs your teenager is depressed.

ReachOut Parents
Sponsored

'I'm not a bridezilla': Bride slammed after revealing her five wedding gowns cost $90,000

Woman 'furious' after she pays $18 for DIY avo toast at Melbourne cafe

Yahoo7 Be
Princess Mary has stepped up her fashion game

Would you like to relax with this NZ backdrop?

Tourism New Zealand
Sponsored

Claims Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson married 'on a rebound'

Yahoo7 Be
20 of the most memorable Emmys gowns ever

Meghan Markle starts first solo project as a royal

Yahoo7 Be
Best-before and use-by dates; are they different?

Woolworths
Sponsored

Inside The Block's perfect score kitchen

Shocking demands these wealthy parents have for their nanny

Yahoo7 Be
Inside Roxy Jacenko's lavish $6.5 million six-bedroom home

11 days left to get your 8 piece Lancôme gift

Myer
Sponsored
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Toggle navigation
BRIEFING
China 'publicly disappeared' its most famous actress 3 months ago with only cryptic clues left

ALEXANDRA MA
OCT 2, 2018, 5:14 AM

Andreas Rentz/Getty
Fan Bingbing has been missing for three months.
One of China’s most well-known actresses has been missing since July 1.
Fan Bingbing was last seen visiting a children’s hospital in Beijing. She has also been inactive on social media.
Her disappearance came after a journalist with state-run TV accused her of tax evasion.
Earlier this year a state-run newspaper said Fan was “under control,” but that report was quickly deleted.
China has banned its state media from reporting about her, so we are no closer to knowing what’s happened.
Many companies she advertised for have since pulled her face from their campaigns.
Fan Bingbing, one of China’s most prominent actresses, went missing exactly three months ago.

She was last seen in public on July 1, when she visited a children’s hospital in Beijing, according to the South China Morning Post.

Her latest post on microblogging site Weibo was on June 2, although her account was seen liking multiple posts on July 23, the newspaper reported. She previously posted on social media at least once a day.

Fan’s disappearance came shortly after she was accused of signing secret contracts for a movie to avoid paying taxes. She has appeared in dozens of movies, including the 2014 film “X-Men: Days of Future Past,” and appeared in ad campaigns for well-known brands like Louis Vuitton and De Beers.

Fan bingbing xmen
20th Century Fox/XMen trailer
She played Blink in a 2014 ‘X-Men’ film.
In May, Cui Yongyuan, a former TV host with the state-run China Central Television, suggested that the actress had signed two contracts: One for 10 million yuan ($US1.5 million), which was used for her taxes, and another 50 million yuan ($US7.3 million), which was kept secret.

These are referred to as “yin-yang contracts” likely named because one contract is public and the other is not. In Mandarin Chinese, yin means dark and yang means light.

Fan’s representatives later released a statement accusing Cui of insinuation and defamation, and Cui later apologised, according to the Straits Times.

But that appeared not to be enough to save her from state scrutiny.

Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images
In late July, the independent Chinese newspaper The Economic Observer reported that police in Jiangsu province were examining Fan’s financial case and that several of Fan’s staff members were also under police investigation.

But shortly after it was published, that report appeared to have been taken offline. Posts speculating on Fan’s whereabouts were also removed from Weibo.

In early September, some two months after Fan’s disappearance, China’s state-run Securities Daily newspaper reported that the actress had been put “under control, and will accept the legal decision.”

That story was also taken offline hours after it was published, but was noted by several news outlets including Taiwan News.

De Beers Jewellers/YouTube
Fan in De Beers’ ad campaign in May 2018.
There have been virtually no news about Fan in China’s state press because in June, authorities issued guidelines to state media telling them not to report on “yin-yang contracts” or tax issues facing people in the entertainment industry.

Rumours of her whereabouts, however, remain rife.

The Chinese arm of Radio France Internationale and the movie industry site Duowei News reported in late September that officials in Jiangsu province were still investigating her case.

Hong Kong’s Apple Daily tabloid also reported that Fan had been questioned by authorities but was not allowed to leave her house.

Nicholas Hunt/Getty Images for The Hollywood Reporter
Fan with actresses Penelope Cruz, Marion Cotillard, Jessica Chastain, and Lupita Nyong’o at the Cannes film festival this May.
Fan’s associates have also appeared to be punished. Earlier this month, a Chinese director who worked with Fan on the movie for which was accused of signing secret contracts saw his cameos mysteriously deleted from another movie at the Toronto film festival in September.

At the time of her disappearance Fan was also reportedly suing a Chinese billionaire for defamation after he accused her of sleeping with China’s vice president and of pocketing bribes from the arrangement.

Guo Wengui, the billionaire she was suing, regularly posts hourlong rants with unverified claims against Chinese officials. He claimed that Fan disappeared because “somebody wants to shut Fan up,” not because of tax-evasion allegations.

Many companies she advertised for, including De Beers and Australian vitamin brand Swisse, have also suspended her image from their campaigns since her disappearance, the Associated Press reported.

Rod Wye, a former official at the British Embassy in China and an associate fellow at Chatham House, told The Sun last month: “For someone like her to be ‘publicly disappeared’ sends out a message that no matter how high you rise, the Party can cut you down again.”

“You can’t tell who will be singled out next,” he said.

NOW WATCH: Briefing videos
Business Insider Emails & Alerts

Site highlights each day to your inbox.


Email address
Join
Follow Business Insider Australia on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Instagram.

Receive notifications straight to your phone.

Tagged In
china defense fan bingbing news uk thelife thewire-us
About
Advertise
Contact
Terms
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Read more news from CNN
VIEW IN APP

Live TV
Fan Bingbing: China says missing actress fined for tax evasion
By Steven Jiang and James Griffiths, CNN
Updated 11:36 PM EDT, Tue October 02, 2018

article video
Beijing (CNN) Chinese actress Fan Bingbing has been fined for tax evasion, state media reported Wednesday, the first public pronouncement about the star since she mysteriously disappeared from public view in June.

According to state-run news agency Xinhua, Fan has been ordered to pay almost $130 million, after she misreported how much money she had received for certain film projects, using so-called "yin-yang contracts" to conceal from the authorities her true remuneration and avoid millions of dollars in taxes.

Fan and companies related to her were ordered to pay around $42 million in late taxes and fees, along with a fine of $86 million. Because she was a first-time offender, the government said criminal charges would not be filed against her if she pays all the money by an undisclosed deadline, Xinhua reported.


The case was clearly designed as a warning to other high profile celebrities, with the State Administration of Taxation saying it had launched a campaign to recover all back taxes in the entertainment industry.

Those who do not meet a December 31 deadline could face criminal charges, the authority said.

Disappeared

Fan has not been seen since June, a month after Cui Yongyuan, a former presenter for state-broadcaster CCTV, accused her of large-scale tax evasion. Fan's disappearance from public view sparked widespread speculation she had been detained by the authorities. Xinhua said she had been under investigation by tax authorities in Jiangsu province, near Shanghai.

The disappearance of one of China's most famous and most bankable stars shocked many in the entertainment industry, which had previously largely avoided Chinese President Xi Jinping's ongoing anti-corruption crackdown.

Under the National Supervision Commission, created in 2018, sweeping investigatory powers which had previously applied only to members of the ruling Communist Party were expanded to cover broad swaths of Chinese society.

"That China feels so emboldened to disappear even one of its most famous actresses ... should be a real wake up call that anyone within China could be next," human rights advocate Michael Caster wrote for CNN last month.

"Yin-yang contracts" are considered a form of tax evasion where the first, smaller contract is reported to authorities while the second, larger one is treated as tax-free income.

According to Xinhua, the investigation of Fan was sparked by her reporting of income from "Air Strike," an upcoming Chinese film starring Liu Ye and Bruce Willis about the Japanese bombings of Chongqing during World War II.

Separately from Fan, officials said her agent, Mou Enguang, obstructed the investigation, and ordered employees of companies owned by Fan and himself to conceal or destroy accounting evidence. Mou is now being detained by police as the investigation of his case continues.

Officials at several local tax bureaus in Jiangsu have also been held responsible for Fan's tax evasion.

View on CNN
© 2018 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | AdChoices
 
Top