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[Interpol] Warrant issued for Guo Wengui, Chinese billionaire threatening to expose corruption

Hamartia Antidote

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http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/917...-billionaire-threatening-to-expose-corruption

1492640585989.jpg

Twitter/@KwokMiles
Guo Wengui, the billionaire hiding from Chinese authorities, has posted messages and photos of himself.

Interpol has issued a "red notice'' seeking the arrest of Guo Wengui, a Chinese billionaire who has threatened to expose corruption at the highest levels of the ruling Communist Party.

Foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang gave no details about Guo's alleged crimes, but The South China Morning Post reported that he is suspected of bribing a former top official in China's intelligence service.

The Interpol notice has raised the stakes in a tense standoff between Chinese authorities and Guo, a real estate tycoon who disappeared from public view in 2014 but resurfaced in recent months, dramatically claiming in interviews with overseas Chinese media and a stream of Twitter posts that he held damning information about party elites.

1492640585989.jpg

Twitter/@KwokMiles
Guo Wengui plays the piano while an Interpol "red notice" has been posted for his arrest.

Guo's case has been closely followed by Chinese political watchers, who say that his leaks could potentially rock the political jockeying between internal factions that is currently taking place ahead of the 19th Party Congress expected this fall, when a new generation of party leaders will be chosen.

A "red notice'' for Guo could also revive concerns over the election of a top Chinese police official as Interpol's president in November. He is believed to be in the U.S. or Britain, two countries that do not have extradition treaties with China.

1492640585989.jpg

Twitter/@KwokMiles
Guo Wengui has posted photos of himself on social media site twitter, working out.

Guo is suspected of giving $8.8 million in bribes to Ma Jian, a former deputy head of China's intelligence service who was charged with corruption in February, The South China Morning Post reported, citing anonymous sources briefed on the Interpol notice.

Guo did not respond to questions about his relationship with Ma but said that he believed the Interpol notice was issued by Chinese authorities to pressure him to forgo a scheduled live interview later on Wednesday evening with US-government-funded Voice of America.

Guo said Chinese agents had ramped up their threats against him and VoA in recent days.

He dismissed the Interpol notice as an ineffectual ploy from the Chinese leadership.

"It's all lies, all threats,'' Guo said. ``It shows they are scared of me leaking explosive information.''

As Guo's live interview with VoA began late Wednesday as planned, the programme's hosts told viewers that Chinese officials had summoned the media organisation's representatives in Beijing to warn them against airing the program and giving Guo a platform to air unsubstantiated allegations.

That may have explained why the program came to an abrupt end 80 minutes later, well before the scheduled three hours was up.

As Guo launched into a meandering description of the intrigue and mutual suspicions gripping leaders in the highest echelons of the Communist Party, a VoA host suddenly halted the broadcast, saying they needed to immediately stop "due to certain kinds of reasons.''

Bill Bishop, a Chinese political watcher who publishes the Sinocism newsletter, said party leaders appear to be increasingly concerned that Guo will reveal information that would cripple high-level officials who are being lined up for key jobs at the party congress.

"A bombshell that screws up the personnel arrangement is exactly the kind of thing that Beijing does not want,'' Bishop said, adding that Guo's allegations of rampant corruption involving even the top official in charge of the party's anti-graft agency has thoroughly undermined the party's propaganda efforts.

Guo allegations have highlighted ``the real issue that corruption unfortunately appears to be in the DNA'' of China's system, Bishop said.

Guo was not listed on Interpol's website and agency officials declined comment, saying that Interpol does not comment on specific cases without the agreement of the member country involved as a matter of policy.

Rights advocates have warned that the abuses and lack of transparency within China's legal system meant there was the potential for Interpol to be misused to attack Beijing's political opponents.

"Our warnings about the risk of political instrumentalisation of Interpol after putting high ranking (Chinese Communist Party) official at the top were not overblown,'' Nicholas Bequelin, Amnesty International's regional director for East Asia, wrote Wednesday on Twitter.

A "red notice'' issued by the Lyon, France-based International Criminal Police Organisation is the closest instrument to an international arrest warrant in use today. Interpol circulates those notices to member countries listing people who are wanted for extradition.
 
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http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/917...-billionaire-threatening-to-expose-corruption

1492640585989.jpg

Twitter/@KwokMiles
Guo Wengui, the billionaire hiding from Chinese authorities, has posted messages and photos of himself.

Interpol has issued a "red notice'' seeking the arrest of Guo Wengui, a Chinese billionaire who has threatened to expose corruption at the highest levels of the ruling Communist Party.

Foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang gave no details about Guo's alleged crimes, but The South China Morning Post reported that he is suspected of bribing a former top official in China's intelligence service.

The Interpol notice has raised the stakes in a tense standoff between Chinese authorities and Guo, a real estate tycoon who disappeared from public view in 2014 but resurfaced in recent months, dramatically claiming in interviews with overseas Chinese media and a stream of Twitter posts that he held damning information about party elites.

1492640585989.jpg

Twitter/@KwokMiles
Guo Wengui plays the piano while an Interpol "red notice" has been posted for his arrest.

Guo's case has been closely followed by Chinese political watchers, who say that his leaks could potentially rock the political jockeying between internal factions that is currently taking place ahead of the 19th Party Congress expected this fall, when a new generation of party leaders will be chosen.

A "red notice'' for Guo could also revive concerns over the election of a top Chinese police official as Interpol's president in November. He is believed to be in the U.S. or Britain, two countries that do not have extradition treaties with China.

1492640585989.jpg

Twitter/@KwokMiles
Guo Wengui has posted photos of himself on social media site twitter, working out.

Guo is suspected of giving $8.8 million in bribes to Ma Jian, a former deputy head of China's intelligence service who was charged with corruption in February, The South China Morning Post reported, citing anonymous sources briefed on the Interpol notice.

Guo did not respond to questions about his relationship with Ma but said that he believed the Interpol notice was issued by Chinese authorities to pressure him to forgo a scheduled live interview later on Wednesday evening with US-government-funded Voice of America.

Guo said Chinese agents had ramped up their threats against him and VoA in recent days.

He dismissed the Interpol notice as an ineffectual ploy from the Chinese leadership.

"It's all lies, all threats,'' Guo said. ``It shows they are scared of me leaking explosive information.''

As Guo's live interview with VoA began late Wednesday as planned, the programme's hosts told viewers that Chinese officials had summoned the media organisation's representatives in Beijing to warn them against airing the program and giving Guo a platform to air unsubstantiated allegations.

That may have explained why the program came to an abrupt end 80 minutes later, well before the scheduled three hours was up.

As Guo launched into a meandering description of the intrigue and mutual suspicions gripping leaders in the highest echelons of the Communist Party, a VoA host suddenly halted the broadcast, saying they needed to immediately stop "due to certain kinds of reasons.''

Bill Bishop, a Chinese political watcher who publishes the Sinocism newsletter, said party leaders appear to be increasingly concerned that Guo will reveal information that would cripple high-level officials who are being lined up for key jobs at the party congress.

"A bombshell that screws up the personnel arrangement is exactly the kind of thing that Beijing does not want,'' Bishop said, adding that Guo's allegations of rampant corruption involving even the top official in charge of the party's anti-graft agency has thoroughly undermined the party's propaganda efforts.

Guo allegations have highlighted ``the real issue that corruption unfortunately appears to be in the DNA'' of China's system, Bishop said.

Guo was not listed on Interpol's website and agency officials declined comment, saying that Interpol does not comment on specific cases without the agreement of the member country involved as a matter of policy.

Rights advocates have warned that the abuses and lack of transparency within China's legal system meant there was the potential for Interpol to be misused to attack Beijing's political opponents.

"Our warnings about the risk of political instrumentalisation of Interpol after putting high ranking (Chinese Communist Party) official at the top were not overblown,'' Nicholas Bequelin, Amnesty International's regional director for East Asia, wrote Wednesday on Twitter.

A "red notice'' issued by the Lyon, France-based International Criminal Police Organisation is the closest instrument to an international arrest warrant in use today. Interpol circulates those notices to member countries listing people who are wanted for extradition.
Tell China who's the next 'Big Tiger' ? Power-for-Money deal = Doing big business, i know it works very well in China ! Make some friends with senior officers of the Party, u can get Green-light to do a big business in whole China, our BIG BRO will cover ur business ! :lol:
 
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LOL, looks like a corrupt dude who try to bride others [8.8 million) now trying tho get away by "I'm going tho expose corruption at the highest level of CPC, please white people save me".

This is the reason why one needs an independent judiciary. So that anyone, irrespective of political status and mileage, can be held to account.
 
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Guo is no angel either. Why would he bribe an official?

China need independent judiciary but not Indian style judiciary

china should copy India's judiciary as it's the world's envy for a clean government.

Do you even know much about India's justice system?

It is actually very good, totally politically independent.

Yes, there are some issues. But those have to do with the poor enforcement of decisions, lack of law and order in some places, and overburdened judiciary, than with the justice system per se
 
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Do you even know much about India's justice system?

It is actually very good, totally politically independent.

Yes, there are some issues. But those have to do with the poor enforcement of decisions, lack of law and order in some places, and overburdened judiciary, than with the justice system per se
Lol. Indian justice system is a joke. Ask the rape victims and dalit. Its the f*cking laughing stock of the world.
 
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Regardless of which part of the world and irrespective of the country or political system, the more money you have the more justice and rights will be accorded to you.

Please don't preach from sitting on a "high horse".
 
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A corrupt man being victimized now?

What's next on the US regime mouthpiece neo-fascist VoA's news desk?

By the same account, 9/11 was a giant firework show and those perished hijackers were in fact starry-eyed freedom fighters.
 
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Interpol alert for someone who wants to expose corruption, whats wrong with China.
 
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In fact 9/11 was an inside job.

Indeed, if one digs deeper, including those corrupt relationship between NY developers and land speculators.

Everybody earned handsomely from the 9/11, perhaps except those perished victims.

But who cares? In response, US regime killed some several hundreds thousands people directly and directly, and displaced several millions.

That's a despicable regime, right there, protecting known dictators, junta and rogue regimes in the world so long as it serves their elite interests.
 
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Interpol alert for someone who wants to expose corruption, whats wrong with China.
Offender will always cry victim. As if there is no fakes lies like what US president Trump claim.
 
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Interpol alert for someone who wants to expose corruption, whats wrong with China.
There are two sides in an act of corruption. The party that give the money and the party that receives the money. The party that received the money is already in jail. So China is going after the party that is giving the money.

What's wrong with this Indian poster?
 
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