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China ex-rail minister given suspended death sentence

huskie

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BBC News - China ex-rail minister given suspended death sentence
A Chinese court has given former Railways Minister Liu Zhijun a suspended death sentence for corruption and abuse of power, state media report.

Liu was accused of accepting bribes totalling over 64m yuan ($10m; £6m) over 25 years.

Prosecutors said he awarded government rail contracts in return for bribes.

Liu is the most high-profile official to be tried and found guilty of corruption since Xi Jinping became China's leader earlier this year.

Mr Xi has called for a crackdown on corruption, vowing to tackle it from the powerful "tigers" at the top to the "flies" at the bottom of the Communist Party.

China's railways ministry, once a powerful department, was disbanded in March.

It had been criticised for a series of safety scandals, and faced allegations of fraud which were uncovered by government audits.
'Malpractice'

Liu was convicted by a court in the capital Beijing on Monday, state-run Xinhua news agency said.

Despite his sentence, he is not expected to face the death penalty - suspended death sentences are normally commuted to life imprisonment in China.

Liu was suspended from the Communist Party last May, following allegations that he embezzled funds and received bribes when handing out contracts for China's high-speed rail project.
File photo: Beijing train China's high-speed railway network has expanded rapidly in recent years

During the trial, prosecutors argued that he had helped 11 people win contracts and promotions in return for bribes.

The indictment reportedly said that Liu's "malpractice" led to "huge losses of public assets and damage to the interests of the state and people".

Liu began his tenure as railways minister in 2003 and led a multi-billion dollar investment programme expanding the rail network.

China's high-speed railway network, said to be the largest in the world, has been plagued with safety scandals involving a series of accidents.

A deadly crash in Wenzhou city in July 2011 killed 40 people and caused a national outcry.

At least two government audits - one released in 2010 and another in 2013 - showed evidence of fraud and irregular accounting in the handling of government funds.

In March, China dissolved the railways ministry in a raft of measures aimed at boosting government efficiency and tackling corruption, placing its functions under the transport ministry.

Liu is the most high-profile official to be tried and found guilty of corruption since Xi Jinping became China's president in March.

But a host of other relatively senior officials, both at a central and provincial level, have also found themselves under investigation.

In May, China announced that it was investigating Liu Tienan, formerly the top official at the body responsible for planning China's economy, for "serious disciplinary violations".

Allegations against Mr Liu first surfaced in December, after an investigative journalist alleged that he made questionable financial deals, fabricated his academic record and threatened to kill a former mistress.

Last month, Lei Zhengfu, a former official at the centre of a sex tape extortion scandal, was jailed for accepting bribes.

And earlier this month, state media announced that a high-level provincial official in Inner Mongolia was also under investigation for "serious disciplinary violations" - which is often code for corruption.
 
In China, administration officials can always squeeze money from infrastructure construction projects. Liu Zhijun is a typical example of those corrupted officials. What they squeeze is national interest.
 
64m yuan ($10m; £6m) over 25 years is not that bad if he did good job, and I believe he had the leadership and charisma doing very good at modernizing railway system. I would just consider it bonus pay! How can a facebook youngster make so much money while a capable leader that modernized a country's railway system be sentenced to life imprisonment?

Now the railways ministry is disbanded, CEOs of the privatized corporation will make much much more money.
 
In China, administration officials can always squeeze money from infrastructure construction projects. Liu Zhijun is a typical example of those corrupted officials. What they squeeze is national interest.

I feel Chinese have too high expectation of administration officials. Corruption is common in every country, just with various forms. They will feel sorry when all those public utility companies go private! I am paying $300-500 a month for electricity and gas just for my small house in the U.S.! Can you imagine if average Chinese households have to pay ¥2000-3000 a month for electricity?
 
I feel Chinese have too high expectation of administration officials. Corruption is common in every country, just with various forms. They will feel sorry when all those public utility companies go private! I am paying $300-500 a month for electricity and gas just for my small house in the U.S.! Can you imagine if average Chinese households have to pay ¥2000-3000 a month for electricity?

Yes, national companies should safeguard its asset to prevent from being sold for the sake of poor Chinese citizens who cannot even afford a living PLACE let alone a house.

$300-500 a month for electricity and gas!! That is too high. You must be in NY or LA? I need just 100 here in Texas where living cost is low.
 
I feel Chinese have too high expectation of administration officials. Corruption is common in every country, just with various forms.

That's true. But they need to make an example out of the high profile cases, otherwise the lower level local officials will not be afraid of punishment.

And people get PISSED off when they find out their local officials are corrupt. It's one of the biggest grievances.

I guess you heard about the recent elections in HK, where 2 out of 3 candidates for the top office (Chief Executive) were corrupt. :angry:

Luckily the winner (CY Leung) was not one of the corrupt ones.
 
Am impressed. Death penalty for the corrupt. Good job china. :china:
 
Certain thing work best if its run by the government. But it must be efficiently run.

That's true. But they need to make an example out of the high profile cases, otherwise the lower level local officials will not be afraid of punishment.

And people get PISSED off when they find out their local officials are corrupt. It's one of the biggest grievances.

I guess you heard about the recent elections in HK, where 2 out of 3 candidates for the top office (Chief Executive) were corrupt. :angry:

Luckily the winner (CY Leung) was not one of the corrupt ones.

How does people know that he is not corrupt? Is it because he was not caught?
 
I'd say he is an extremely capable minister; it is impossible for anyone to discuss any Chinese HSR achievement without mentioning his contributions. He was in a position of managing $300+ billion of investment and his administration built 8000 km+ of HSR before he was detained in early 2011(plus a few thousand more under construction at that time), more importantly, China acquired necessary technologies all because of his strategies. He used less than $1 billion for political purposes according to rumors, and he embezzled less than $2 million.

His suspended death sentence is politically motivated. But normally he will get bail in 15-20 years if not earlier.

In China, administration officials can always squeeze money from infrastructure construction projects. Liu Zhijun is a typical example of those corrupted officials. What they squeeze is national interest.
 
well, the reality is like a three-way choice: the most common 'corrupt and incapable' ones, the less common 'corrupt but capable' ones, or the very rare 'uncorrupted but inept' ones. Uncorrupted and capable ones are saints, they don't belong in this world.

I feel Chinese have too high expectation of administration officials. Corruption is common in every country, just with various forms. They will feel sorry when all those public utility companies go private! I am paying $300-500 a month for electricity and gas just for my small house in the U.S.! Can you imagine if average Chinese households have to pay ¥2000-3000 a month for electricity?
 
Certain thing work best if its run by the government. But it must be efficiently run.



How does people know that he is not corrupt? Is it because he was not caught?

Yes. :D

But the other two options were blatantly corrupt, they even wrote a stage play which joked about how corrupt Henry Tang was.

CY Leung seems OK to me, I think he is not bad in his job as our current Chief Executive. He is not as bad as the previous two leaders anyway.
 
In China, administration officials can always squeeze money from infrastructure construction projects. Liu Zhijun is a typical example of those corrupted officials. What they squeeze is national interest.

How the top officials or prosecuted in China? I mean the procedure of filing complaints and conducting investigation... And how does it is ensured so that a person dont fall victim of political rivalry.........Here, in India things go very slowly (sometime case move on for decades) and rarely any minister or top official get punished...allegation against the officials from the opponents are very common too.

Thanks in advance..
 
Liu's achievements far out-weigh his misdeeds。

The man has now been given a suspended death sentence and is likely to stay imprisoned for at least 14 years,but I still thank him for all the work he has done to make the Chinese rail network one of the world‘s best。
 
This is how it is done Sonia Gandhi Ki bari Kab ayagi
 
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