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A Chinese Tycoon Denounced Xi Jinping. Now He Faces Prosecution
The party accused Ren Zhiqiang, an influential property tycoon who criticized Xi Jinping, of being disloyal, took aim at his children and paved the way for criminal prosecution.

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Ren Zhiqiang, a veteran Communist Party member and former chairman of Huayuan Properties, was detained in March after criticizing Xi Jinping’s response to the coronavirus outbreak. Credit...COLOR CHINA PHOTO, via Associated Press

By Javier C. Hernández
July 24, 2020
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China’s ruling Communist Party has expelled an outspoken and prominent property tycoon who denounced the country’s authoritarian leader, Xi Jinping, paving the way for his criminal prosecution and escalating its efforts to quash dissent among the elite.

The party announced the expulsion of the tycoon, Ren Zhiqiang, late Thursday, and said that it had seized his assets for “serious violations of discipline and law” that included the possession of golf club memberships. Officials also took aim at Mr. Ren’s family, accusing him of “colluding with his children to accumulate wealth without restraint.”

The moves against Mr. Ren, 69, appeared designed to send a chill over the country’s entrepreneurs and other business leaders and demonstrate the party’s resolve to use him as an example to show that no one was above its demands of unflinching political loyalty.

He was accused of “smearing the party and country’s image, distorting the party and the military’s history, being disloyal and dishonest with the party” and of resisting the party’s investigation into him — phrasing that suggests he has refused to admit any wrongdoing.

Mr. Ren, a veteran party member and former chairman of Huayuan Properties, a real estate development company, was detained in March after criticizing Mr. Xi’s response to the coronavirus outbreak. He is likely to face criminal charges in China’s opaque and often- unforgiving legal system.

Mr. Ren’s friends said that the party’s harsh treatment of Mr. Ren was excessive.

“This is blatant political persecution,” Wang Ying, a retired entrepreneur and friend of Mr. Ren’s, said in a post on WeChat, a popular messaging app. “This is a rare good man, a good citizen who is responsible and ready to take responsibility, an entrepreneur who played his role and followed the law.”

“I’m proud to have a friend like you,” Ms. Wang wrote.

Under Mr. Xi, who rose to power in 2012, the Chinese authorities have investigated or detained scores of lawyers, journalists and scholars who have challenged the party line, often on spurious charges. The crackdown has intensified in recent months, as the party has come under intense criticism for its handling of the coronavirus, its imposition of new national security laws in Hong Kong and the ongoing crackdown on Muslims in the western region of Xinjiang.

“Xi has zero tolerance for political dissent, let alone any leeway for being openly mocked,” said Jude Blanchette, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a research institute based in Washington, D.C. “From Hong Kong to Xinjiang, it’s clear that Xi and the party will close the fist when they sense a security or political challenge to their core rule, international outcry be damned.”

As Chinese business executives have attracted devoted followings in recent years, the party has worked more aggressively to bring them under its control. China depends on entrepreneurs for innovations that drive its economy, but officials also worry their celebrity could pose a threat to the party’s dominance.

Mr. Xi told a meeting of entrepreneurs in Beijing on Tuesday that one of their most important aims should be to “enhance their patriotism.”

“Patriotism is the glorious tradition of our country’s outstanding entrepreneurs in modern times,” he said, according to a transcript published by Xinhua, the official news agency.

Mr. Ren, a bold commentator who earned the nickname “The Cannon,” went missing in March after writing an essay criticizing the party’s response to the coronavirus outbreak, which emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late December.

In the essay, Mr. Ren said the party’s strict limits on free speech, including the silencing of whistle blowers, had exacerbated the crisis. At one point, he referred obliquely to Mr. Xi, who has tried to craft an image as a commanding, transformative leader, as a power-hungry “clown.”

“I see not an emperor standing there exhibiting his ‘new clothes,’ but a clown who stripped naked and insisted on continuing to be an emperor,” Mr. Ren wrote. He said he hoped the party would “wake up from ignorance” and oust the leaders getting in its way.

The party discipline committee in Beijing on Thursday pointed to Mr. Ren’s writings in outlining his alleged misdeeds.

Party officials also accused Mr. Ren of using public funds to pay for private expenses, setting the stage for corruption and embezzlement charges. Those expenses included golf club membership cards, the announcement said. The party has long used golf to conjure up images of luxury and excess; Mao once called it a “sport for millionaires.”

placed him on a year’s probation for denouncing Mr. Xi’s propaganda policies in comments online and shut down his social media accounts, where he had attracted tens of millions of followers.

Mr. Ren, the former leader of a state-run company and a friend to influential Chinese politicians, is a well-known member of the establishment who joined the Communist Party when he was 23. His expulsion highlights fears within the party that any criticism from its own members could undermine its grip on power, activists say.

“Ren Zhiqiang is not a radical dissident, but a decades-long loyal Communist Party member who advocated for political reform,” said Yaqiu Wang, a China researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The Communist Party has no tolerance of any kind of criticism towards the party, even if it is made with the intention to improve the party’s governance.”

The party has in recent months detained several other prominent figures who have criticized Mr. Xi’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak.

Xu Zhangrun, a law professor who had repeatedly denounced Mr. Xi’s authoritarian policies, was briefly detained this month after writing essays blaming officials for delays and obfuscation in the early days of the epidemic. The police accused Mr. Xu of consorting with prostitutes, a charge his friends said was untrue and used as a slur to discredit him. He has since been dismissed from his teaching position at Tsinghua University in Beijing, friends say.

Xu Zhiyong, a legal activist, was detained in February, activists say, after accusing Mr. Xi of trying to conceal the coronavirus and calling on him to step down. He was formally arrested last month.

strengthen his rule amid the coronavirus crisis, he is most likely worried about threats to his leadership within elite political and business circles, analysts say.

Erin Baggott Carter, assistant professor at the School of International Relations at the University of Southern California, said Mr. Ren’s expulsion is “a warning to other C.C.P. elites to toe the line,” referring to the Chinese Communist Party.

She said Mr. Xi’s popularity among elites and the broader public could be suffering amid a series of challenges, including unemployment and tensions with the United States.

“He cannot tolerate dissent, particularly from powerful elites with public support,” she said, referring to Mr. Xi. “These elites could most challenge his leadership.”

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Javier C. Hernández is a China correspondent for The New York Times. He has covered the rise of the authoritarian state under Xi Jinping, the spread of social causes like the #MeToo movement and the plight of China’s most vulnerable citizens, including migrant workers and pollution victims. @HernandezJavier
 
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Are you going to seek truth of who's behind :usflag:mismanagement of the pandemic? You don't seem to care much about what's happening in your own country at the moment :enjoy:
Obviously, the life value of Americans is far less than that of Chinese

4.2million,149k died
 
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Right. Pretty good collection of CCP-lovers up there ^^^. Nothing about the substance of the article. Just the typical off-topic misdirection and ad hominem childish rebuttals. The CCP-lover brigade is soooooooooooooooo predictable!
 
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In your dreams. It refutes nothing.
Self denial is good for delusionist. You and US are declining power. :enjoy:

Can only use low life dirty tricks to bring down competitors rather than behave like a real man to compete one one one.
 
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In your dreams. It refutes nothing.
It refutes everything. And I'll tell you what else, Xi is going to destroy every single one of America's running dogs, sleeper agents, and Manchurian candidates. The network of collaborators you spends decades and billions cultivating in China is going to be dismantled in the blink of an eye and there's nothing you can do about it.:)
 
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Right. Pretty good collection of CCP-lovers up there ^^^. Nothing about the substance of the article. Just the typical off-topic misdirection and ad hominem childish rebuttals. The CCP-lover brigade is soooooooooooooooo predictable!
Good comeback /s
Not surprised that's all you got :enjoy:
 
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Right. Pretty good collection of CCP-lovers up there ^^^. Nothing about the substance of the article. Just the typical off-topic misdirection and ad hominem childish rebuttals. The CCP-lover brigade is soooooooooooooooo predictable!

Its an echo chamber after all.

Real damage has been done and is continuing to be done to them at scale outside where it matters...the intensity of which in some areas is quite mind boggling if you see what this lot are being called out as increasingly.

Soon enough in western world, disawoval of PRC and CCP will be a very basic precondition to any sustained functionality of note in the society (even for its hardcore supporter tiny minority which must be hell for them)....because of the degenerate chasm CCP is busy doubling down on.

This all only adds to the ranting in here (and similar insulated zones) because they get to have a cocoon of fellow-ideologues festering and a worship complex on top from cheerleader mobs. It is a refuge and safe space from the increasingly cruel world to their ideology and hive-mind cult at large... and its funny and easy to forward some of these echo chamber rants to any remaining neutral people I know or come across....helps do its bit to convincing them.

This phase is just getting started. It is amusingly ironic they achieve nothing of note in here except same old rants and self-high fives in hive-minded dependent emotional outbursts with same old crowd....while in reality it just augments the counter-narrative driving it in here....as all the specimens and reaction of the specimens are available to display in toxic concentrated glory to greater audience lmao.
 
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Are you going to seek truth of who's behind :usflag:mismanagement of the pandemic? You don't seem to care much about what's happening in your own country at the moment :enjoy:
Oh come on, America is doing a great job......



blaming China for her problems at home. In fairness, 4.5 million cases is low because America is a superpower. Trump is doing a great job.
 
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Running dogs thought USA protected them :rofl:

Not really! It's easy to understand why capitalists and officials love west style politics, they don't want central government to restrict them.
 
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