Posted on 03/20/2012 8:04:07 AM PDT by Mikey_1962
Many China watchers were stunned by the announcement of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee on March 15 that prominent Party leader Bo Xilai had been removed from his post. For the past several years, Bo Xilai was a rising star in Communist Chinas firmament. Many western observers have speculated that he would one day be Chinas paramount leader.
As Party Secretary governing Chongqing (formerly Chungking), a sprawling megalopolis of 30 million people, Bo appeared to be on the way up. He was a member of the national 24-member governing Politburo and was expected by many to be appointed to the all-powerful nine-member Standing Committee of the Politburo. It is very unlikely, to say the least, that that will happen now.
No official explanations have been given for the abrupt purging. Chinas official news agency Xinuanet provided this bare-bones announcement of Bo Xilais removal and replacement:
Zhang Dejiang has been appointed Party chief of Chongqing, replacing Bo Xilai, according to a decision of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee announced Thursday. Bo will no longer serve as secretary, standing committee member or member of the CPC Chongqing municipal committee.
The decision was announced by Li Yuanchao, head of the Organization Department of the CPC Central Committee, at a meeting of officials in Chongqing on Thursday, according to a report on xinhuanet.com. Li said the CPC Central Committee made the decision after discreet consideration and based on current circumstances and the overall situation.
Unlike the typical stiff, stolid Communist Party leader, Bo is known for his casual, western style of political showmanship. A charismatic and cultured princeling who comes from the ranks of privileged Party members from the era of Mao Zedong, Bo speaks fluent English and mixes easily with politicians and business leaders from the United States and Europe. But his style can be deceiving. Bo is no liberal bent on moving China toward greater political openness, transparency, and improved human rights. To the contrary, Bo had caused considerable alarm at home and abroad with his populist appeals to rekindle the violent Communist zeal of Maos Cultural Revolution. As we reported last August (Kissinger Sings Convergence Theme With China's "Red Song" Choir), Bo hosted Henry Kissinger at Chongqings huge propaganda festival aimed at reigniting revolutionary fervor and Party devotion.
Other Party leaders, apparently, saw Bos showboating as an attempt to build his own cult of personality, something that could threaten their collective leadership process.
Wang Lijuns foiled defection There is another likely cause for the timing of Bo Xilais fall from grace. It involves Wang Lijun, a high-profile protégé and political sidekick of Bo Xilai. As Vice Mayor and Chief of Police of Chonqing City, Wang Lijun had carved out an image as a fearless crime fighter, waging war on the citys powerful Triad gangs and corrupt officials. Wang had become one of Chinas most famous figures, a hero to many. And his aggressive (many critics say brutal) anti-crime program was a centerpiece of Bos reform platform.
On February 6, Wang donned a disguise to slip past the secret police teams keeping surveillance on his residence and drove four hours to the U.S. Consulate General in Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province. According to some reports, Wang arrived at the U.S. Consulate around 9:00 p.m. and asked for asylum but was denied after the consul sought direction from U.S. Amb. Gary Locke in Beijing, who then checked with the White House. Having learned of Wangs whereabouts, Bo reportedly sent 70 police cars and more than a hundred police officers to surround the U.S. Consulate. Bos invasion of a neighboring province and jeopardizing of foreign relations apparently upset not only the CPC officials in Chengdu but in Beijing as well. Sichuans provincial police and national police were sent in to expel Bos Chonqing police from Chengdu.
At about 6:00 p.m. the following day, February 7, Wang Lijun left the U.S. Consulate and was taken to Beijing by the Vice Minister from the Ministry of Public Security. Did the Obama administration deny Wang asylum? If so, why? Was it merely to prevent a hiccup in Sino-American relations? Did the administration throw a defector to the wolves in order to have a smooth smile-fest event for what was then the pending visit of Chinas Vice-President Xi Jinping?
The U.S. State Department has not provided any information on the Wang Lijun case, aside from this transcript of a daily press briefing on February 8 with Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland:
QUESTION: specifically these reports coming out of China that a deputy mayor of Chongqing had sought refuge at the consulate in Chengdu and that there had been an unexpected increase in security personnel around the consulate for a while. What can you tell us about any of this?
MS. NULAND: Well, I think youre referring to reports about the vice mayor of Chongqing right City. So his name is Wang Lijun. Wang Lijun did request a meeting at the U.S. Consulate General in Chengdu earlier this week in his capacity as vice mayor. The meeting was scheduled, our folks met with him, he did visit the consulate and he later left the consulate of his own volition. So and obviously, we dont talk about issues having to do with refugee status, asylum, et cetera.
QUESTION: Okay. But so can you tell us exactly when that meeting took place?
MS. NULAND: I believe were here on Wednesday I believe it was Monday, but if that is not right, we will get back to you.
QUESTION: Do you have any information about what have you had any subsequent contact with him? Because theres some questions about his whereabouts.
MS. NULAND: Yeah. To my knowledge, we have not.
QUESTION: And aside from any possible thing that you couldnt talk about on asylum can you tell us what he did talk about there? What was the purpose of this meeting?
MS. NULAND: Frankly, I dont have anything at the moment on the substance of the meeting.
QUESTION: Can you say why you said he used why you used the term, he left the consulate of his on his own volition?
MS. NULAND: Well again, there has been some reporting to indicate that that might not have been the case, but it was the case.
QUESTION: Okay. The reporting being that he had been forced to leave or that had been dragged out, or
MS. NULAND: Theres been unusual reporting about all of this. So just to reaffirm for you, that he walked out, it was his choice.
Of course, if the Obama administration refused to grant Wang Lijun asylum, as reported in various accounts, then was the choice to leave really his choice?
What has become of Wang Lijun? China Daily, the CPCs official English-language newspaper, does not shed any light on his current status or whereabouts, merely offering this report today concerning his replacement:
The Central Committee of the CPC has decided to remove Wang Lijun from the position of deputy mayor of Chongqing, a senior official with the Organization Department of the CPC Central Committee confirmed on Thursday.
Wang's removal is being handled according to procedures, the official told xinhuanet.com.
He Ting, deputy governor and police chief of Qinghai province, has been nominated to replace Wang as deputy mayor of Chongqing.
Bo hosted Henry Kissinger at Chongqings huge propaganda festival aimed at reigniting revolutionary fervor and Party devotion....
Other Party leaders, apparently, saw Bos showboating as an attempt to build his own cult of personality, something that could threaten their collective leadership process."
Our Totalitarian Bankers behind closed doors.
Am I the only one here?
ML/NJ
How do they keep track of those goofy names. It’s hard to take it seriously.
With that group, the ‘Gotti’ syndrome comes to mind.
Wasn’t there a hit song called ‘Hey, Bo Xilai’?
“Wang Lijuns foiled defection There is another likely cause for the timing of Bo Xilais fall from grace. It involves Wang Lijun, a high-profile protégé and political sidekick of Bo Xilai. As Vice Mayor and Chief of Police of Chonqing City, Wang Lijun had carved out an image as a fearless crime fighter, waging war on the citys powerful Triad gangs and corrupt officials.”
This seems to be the key for me. Bo & Wang stepped on some well-connected toes, Wang got a visit from Moose & Rocko (or their Chinese equivalent) and tried to run. The connections run past Beijing all the way to Washington, and Wang was turned away. Bo is simply the other shoe to drop.
China appears to be somewhat unforgiving to those who rock the boat.
Bo was highly ambitious and charismatic. Many Politburo members resented and were suspicious of his growing power.
There has been a dramatic increase of income of workers in coastal areas around Chongqing and Bo’s government strongly supported investment from Taiwan firms.
Many Taiwan companies have come to Chongqing because Bo promised no change in investment policies.
It is suspected that Bo may have personally benefited from these new trade relationships and he is being investigated for corruption.
I think it possible that he may be tossed from the Poliburo and maybe even arrested. With his charisma and popularity that would throw China into a real potential internal feud.
This is a big deal.
Bo seems to have been pushing his own cult and toying with a new “cultural revolution” to deal with his opponents. Good thing he has been derailed. I hope it sticks.
Rumors of attempted coup overnight related to purge, via Zerohedge:
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/andy-lees-china-coup-rumors
Additional article of interest:
http://freebeacon.com/bye-bye-bo/
“BYE BYE BO
Flamboyant China Party Boss Ousted”
by Bill Gertz
March 15, 2012
Thanks for the ping gandalftb.
Coup Banned on China Microblogs as Rumors Fly
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Created: 2012-03-20 16:25 EST
Screenshot of a photo posted on Weibo by Li Delin, who is on the editorial board of Securities Market Weekly. Li reported army vehicles on Changan Street in Beijing.
Monday evening and early Tuesday morning Beijing time, rumors began to appear on Chinas popular Twitter-like microblogs that a possible coup attempt had occurred in Beijing.
The earlier messages related to military police gathered at Changan Avenue, a major thoroughfare in Beijing. Li Delin, an editor of the magazine Securities Market Weekly, wrote about seeing military vehicles, plainclothes police, and even iron fences set up on some intersections on Changan.
Other posts claimed that gunfire had been heard, and words like Changan and gunshots began to be censored on microblogs like Sina Weibo.
Rumors began to fly about military forces entering Beijing. Some netizens linked the rumors with the recently demoted Communist official Bo Xilai. They claimed that the military presence was due to infighting over Bos fate between Communist Party leader Hu Jintaos faction, and former leader Jiang Zemins faction, including head of the Political and Legislative Affairs Committee Zhou Yongkang.
Those rumors have not been substantiated. And at least some of the photos circulating of military vehicles in Beijing Monday night were later discredited. They were actually photos from a rehearsal for a National Day parade in 2010.
Tuesday was quiet in Beijing during the day, with media reporting that things seemed to be business as usual. Tuesday evening Beijing time, the word coup was finally censored on Sina Weibo.
The fact that the rumors of a coup gained traction so quickly after Bo Xilai was ousted from his position last week shows that Chinese netizens are closely watching the unfolding political drama.
But this was not the first time that rumors on Chinese microblogs became “news.” Last month, false rumors broke out that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un had died. In January, Weibo rumors of a coup attempt in North Korea also made the news.
This time, the reports of a possible coup in Beijing may have even affected the foreign exchange marketsaccording to The Economic Voice, Rumors of a military coup in Beijing has sent the USD higher once more and the Aussie dollar tumbling even further.
Great posts.
To what effect did Bo’s anti-triad Chongqing campaign, headed by his police chief, Wang Lijun have in all this?
Loan sharking, gambling and prostitution businesses run by the triads are said to have been worth nearly $5 billion a year.
Bo and Lijun jailed hundreds of triad members and over 1,500 triad-corrupted officials.
Also, why would Lijun flee to Beijing, he could have tiptoed in found refuge in at least 4 embassies in Chongqing?
Did Lijun cut a deal with the Politburo conservatives to rat out Bo and perhaps tell all about Bo’s rumored property holding overseas, rumored to have been created by Taiwan business interests and triad families untouched by Bo and Lijun’s crime-fighting?
I think this is a showcase battle between Beijing conservatives, that want the Politburo to operate under collective leadership, and Maoist and leftist reformers championed by Bo.
Interesting that the leftist websites wyzxsx.com and Maoflag.net have been offline for “maintenance” since Bo was sacked.
Do crypto-RATS get ever “purged” in Republican Party “shakeups”? Do Republican Party shakeups even exist? Gus Hall could register as a Pubbie and be welcomed with open arms by the RNC no questions asked, $20 mill yearly donations from the Soviets that he received gladly accepted!
Thanks gandalftb.
This guy wanted to go back to pure communism and get rid of the market oriented reforms.
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