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Chinese PM Wen Jia Bao has hidden fortune of $2.7 billion

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The New York Times investigation about the family of Wen Jiabao, who will be replaced in a 10-yearly leadership transition next month, coincided with an announcement clearing the way for the prosecution of disgraced leader Bo Xilai.

Beijing immediately dismissed the report as an attempt to tarnish China, with foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei telling reporters in response to a question on the article: "Some reports smear China and have ulterior motives."

Detailing a string of deals, the newspaper said that many relatives of the government's number two -- a self-styled man of the people known popularly as "Grandpa Wen" -- had become "extraordinarily wealthy" during his time in office.

Investments by Wen's son, wife and others spanning the banking, jewellery and telecom sectors were worth at least $2.7 billion according to an analysis of company and regulatory filings from 1992-2012.

The revelations come as a particular embarrassment for Wen, who is the standard-bearer of the Communist Party's reformist wing and has campaigned against the rampant corruption that infuriates many ordinary Chinese.

In a speech published in April, he said official corruption was "the biggest danger facing the ruling party" and warned that "those who hold political power may perish" unless it is addressed.

President Hu Jintao, who like Wen will step down after 10 years in office, has also made fighting graft in the Communist Party a top priority, and the issue is sure to figure in the party's 18th congress starting on November 8.

Ahead of the congress, the party proceeded with an unfinished item of business on Friday with the announcement by state media that ex-Chongqing city boss Bo had been expelled from parliament and had his legal immunity lifted.

The decision to remove him from the National People's Congress clears the way for Bo to be put on trial for corruption and other crimes related to the murder of a British businessman.

State-owned Xinhua news agency said that Bo had "borne major responsibility" for the poisoning of Neil Heywood, even though his wife has already been convicted of his murder and handed a suspended death sentence.

Bo, who led a leftist "Red revival" inside the party from his base in Chongqing, was once tipped for elevation to the elite politburo and his demise has exposed internal divisions in China's highly secretive power structure.

The NYT investigation darkens the clouds hanging over the Communist Party caused by the Bo scandal as the regime prepares to name successors to Wen and Hu to steer the world's second-largest economy for the next decade.

Next month's congress will culminate in the unveiling of a new politburo that is expected to see Vice President Xi Jinping promoted to Communist Party general-secretary, in place of Hu.

Xi was the subject of a June investigation by financial news agency Bloomberg alleging that his relatives had also built up a giant portfolio of investments in property and stocks worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

Public anger about corruption and cronyism is on the rise in China, fanned by social media which enables the spreading of stories about official wrongdoing despite the best efforts of the country's powerful censors.

All online searches related to the New York Times as well as the newspaper's websites were blocked on Friday, as were references to Wen, his wife and his son, Wen Yunsong.

The NYT investigation covered alleged dealings by Wen's younger brother and brother-in-law, as well as his businessman son -- one of the younger generation of so-called "princelings" with access to the upper reaches of the party.

The business of Wen's wife, Zhang Beili, a well-known jewellery and gemstone expert, had become "an off-the-charts success only as her husband moved into the country's top leadership ranks", The Times said.

His elderly mother meanwhile owned a stake valued at $120 million in 2007 in the enormous Ping An insurance giant, which benefited from reforms during Wen's tenure, according to the newspaper.

It gave no figure for the family's net worth now, but calculated the value of the assets they had controlled over the period examined. No holdings were found in Wen's name.

Speculation of a hidden fortune has been circulating for years, fuelled by US embassy documents from 2007 made public by WikiLeaks that alleged influence-peddling by members of Wen's family.

One cable suggested the 70-year-old leader knew of the business dealings of his family but disapproved of them.

The New York Times quoted one unnamed former government colleague of Wen who linked the report to the jostling for power inside the Communist Party, where former leaders retain influence after the end of their time in office.

"His enemies are intentionally trying to smear him by letting this leak out," said the former colleague.

A spokeswoman for the newspaper, Eileen Murphy, expressed disappointment that access to the company's English- and newly launched Chinese-language websites had been blocked as a result of the investigation.

AFP contacted the reporter, Shanghai bureau chief David Barboza, who said he was unable to comment and referred all enquiries to headquarters.

The website of Bloomberg is still blocked inside China after its June expose on Xi.
 
He is a chink what do you expect. That is how chink behaves. Quite similar to sinkie behaviour but sinkie traits put cowardice as their main profound trait.
 
He is a chink what do you expect. That is how chink behaves. Quite similar to sinkie behaviour but sinkie traits put cowardice as their main profound trait.

Exactly. Asians in general, who get into politics in Asian countries, their main purpose is to get rich. It's the same in Indonesia, Bangladesh, Philippines, Malaysia, India, Taiwan, etc. Nothing new about the news.

If CSJ becomes the Prime Minister, it will business as usual in Singapore. Guaranteed he will be a billionaire by the time he leaves office. Nothing new about it.
 
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BEIJING: Chinese censors blocked online searches related to the New York Times as well as the newspaper's websites on Friday after it published an investigation on the wealth of the Chinese premier's family.

Searches for "New York Times" in Chinese and "NYT" were blocked on the popular social networking website Sina Weibo, which is similar to Twitter, with searches returning a message that the result could not be displayed "due to relevant laws".

The New York Times' official accounts on Sina Weibo and a popular rival, Tencent Weibo, had both been deleted on Friday, with attempts to access the accounts returning the message "this user does not exist".

Searches for premier "Wen Jiabao" were also blocked on both social networking sites, but the names of top Chinese leaders are generally blocked on such sites.

Both Weibo sites also blocked searches using the name of Wen's wife, Zhang Beili, and his son Wen Yunsong.

China's most popular Internet search engine, Baidu, displayed a message saying "some results cannot be displayed" in response to searches for the name of Wen and his family.

While China's 538 million Internet users are able to use microblogs to accuse local officials of corruption, posts making reference to China's most powerful politicians are regularly deleted by online censors.

The New York Times launched a Chinese-language website in June, "designed to bring New York Times journalism to China," the company said. The website, and its English equivalent, were inaccessible to ordinary Chinese users on Friday.

The New York Times reported that Wen's family had controlled assets worth US$2.7 billion dollars according to company and regulatory filings seen by the newspaper from 1992-2012.

The report comes as an embarrassment for Wen, whose public image is of a man of humble origins and a reformer fighting abuses and corruption within the party -- a source of widespread anger among ordinary Chinese.

- AFP/ck
 
Exactly. Asians in general, who get into politics in Asian countries, their main purpose is to get rich. It's the same in Indonesia, Bangladesh, Philippines, Malaysia, India, Taiwan, etc. Nothing new about the news.

If CSJ becomes the Prime Minister, it will business as usual in Singapore. Guaranteed he will be a billionaire by the time he leaves office. Nothing new about it.

Dun take this chance to pour negatives on CSJ. Look at your greedy master first. CSJ is an ang mor educated PHD holder unlike your low life sinkie bullshit master LKY AND LHL,especially LHL who is not even a PHD holder. Too uneducated to run a country. most of them the idea of asian leaders are too asian for their own good which lead to the infamous asian shit behavior.
 
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Exactly. Asians in general, who get into politics in Asian countries, their main purpose is to get rich. It's the same in Indonesia, Bangladesh, Philippines, Malaysia, India, Taiwan, etc. Nothing new about the news.

If CSJ becomes the Prime Minister, it will business as usual in Singapore. Guaranteed he will be a billionaire by the time he leaves office. Nothing new about it.

If you asked tony chat he would only say it's specifically chinese that do it even though the countries that you have listed aren't chinese countries.
 
Who says you can't censor the internet? China is doing it right now....pappies should follow suit
 
Who says you can't censor the internet? China is doing it right now....pappies should follow suit

Agree. Only those indulgent ang mos care for freedom. Singaporeans are pragmatic people. They know that freedom can't put food on the table.
 
Agree. Only those indulgent ang mos care for freedom. Singaporeans are pragmatic people. They know that freedom can't put food on the table.

freedom is a first world concept, low life 3rd world shit dun understand at all.
 
Do you know how hard it is to become No. 2 of the CCP? For that, I think he deserved his 2 billions.
 
don't believe the American lies!

Mr Wen Jia Bao, a humble and modest man earned himself a modest salary of something like sgd$15K annually unlike the ransom salaries by some Chinese politicians in a city state. he can't be corrupt.. :D
 
don't believe the American lies!

Mr Wen Jia Bao, a humble and modest man earned himself a modest salary of something like sgd$15K annually unlike the ransom salaries by some Chinese politicians in a city state. he can't be corrupt.. :D

i think its not him. but those around him going around amassing mass wealth using his name without his consent.
 
If Wen is not a billionaire, than i think something is really wrong with china
 
i think its not him. but those around him going around amassing mass wealth using his name without his consent.

Agree. No politician is clean, but Wen is the cleanest and most noble of them all. He is the modern Zhou En Lai.
Fuck all of you who know shit and go around barking. :oIo:
 
i think its not him. but those around him going around amassing mass wealth using his name without his consent.

This reminds us of President Suharto.
He was seen as a very kind and humble man who lived a simple life when he was president, well liked by many Indonesians. However the wealth amassed by his family was legendary - including his son Hutomo Mandala Putra and daughter Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana. His son-in-law Prawono was one of the wealthiest presidential candidates, and now a potential presidential candidate in the forthcoming election.
If there is any consolation for the nation, it is that Suharto brought peace and stability to Indonesia as well as Southeast Asia as a whole.
Singapore benefitted as a nation from this stability. I think that is a good trade-of.
 
This reminds us of President Suharto.
He was seen as a very kind and humble man who lived a simple life when he was president, well liked by many Indonesians. However the wealth amassed by his family was legendary - including his son Hutomo Mandala Putra and daughter Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana. His son-in-law Prawono was one of the wealthiest presidential candidates, and now a potential presidential candidate in the forthcoming election.
If there is any consolation for the nation, it is that Suharto brought peace and stability to Indonesia as well as Southeast Asia as a whole.
Singapore benefitted as a nation from this stability. I think that is a good trade-of.
You left out his wife....aka 'Tien percent'.
I believe those Indonesians who suffered under his iron rule would not have agreed it was a good trade off...
 
Do you know how hard it is to become No. 2 of the CCP? For that, I think he deserved his 2 billions.

LKY used to say : It's better to pay the fellow what he deserves on the table for all to see than to pay the fellow a little on the table but for him to go around collecting a lot under the table where none can see (non verbatim).

I will have to stop here quoting more words of wisdom - otherwise I get zapped by some under-table tacits in this forum for "displaying excessive stupidity" - notwithstanding that the words of wisdom are admired by many far and wide.

I supposed the truth is sometimes harder to swallow.
 
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