s******y 发帖数: 17729 | | x******g 发帖数: 33885 | 2 你就是轮子
【在 s******y 的大作中提到】 : 轮子这回还没报道?
| s******y 发帖数: 17729 | 3 http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/22/world/asia/corruption-inquiry
hinas-top-security-officials.html
Beijing Official Detained in Investigation of Former Security Chief
By CHRIS BUCKLEY and JONATHAN ANSFIELDFEB. 21, 2014
【在 s******y 的大作中提到】 : 轮子这回还没报道?
| s******y 发帖数: 17729 | 4 现在自焚还来得及吗?授予我轮子称号?
【在 x******g 的大作中提到】 : 你就是轮子
| x******g 发帖数: 33885 | 5 Page Not Found
We're sorry; we seem to have lost this page,
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【在 s******y 的大作中提到】 : http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/22/world/asia/corruption-inquiry : hinas-top-security-officials.html : Beijing Official Detained in Investigation of Former Security Chief : By CHRIS BUCKLEY and JONATHAN ANSFIELDFEB. 21, 2014
| s******y 发帖数: 17729 | 6 HONG KONG — A Communist Party corruption investigation focusing on the form
er head of China’s domestic security apparatus has reached into the secreti
ve realm of the intelligence services with the detention of a senior officia
l, people close to party and military leaders said this week.
Liang Ke, the director of the Beijing Municipal Bureau of State Security, wa
s taken into custody last month by the party’s arm for investigating offici
al misconduct, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, according t
o three people this week, who cited information from leaders notified of the
decision.
They said the allegations against Mr. Liang involved corruption as well as h
is dealings with Zhou Yongkang, the former security chief who has been the m
ain subject of the investigation.
Two people, a former security official and a policy adviser to party leaders
, both speaking on the condition of anonymity, said senior officials had tol
d them that Mr. Liang was suspected of aiding Mr. Zhou by illicitly passing
on information gathered by the bureau’s network of agents, phone taps and i
nformants in the Chinese capital.
“The official message sent down was that Liang Ke was suspected of corrupti
on,” the former security official said. “But as well, Liang Ke was detaine
d because he is suspected of assisting Zhou Yongkang beyond approved means a
nd channels.”
The investigations into Mr. Zhou’s former subordinates and colleagues annou
nced so far have been portrayed as part of President Xi Jinping’s campaign
against graft by the party elite. But the new details suggest that Mr. Xi is
also worried that Mr. Zhou sought to turn sections of the domestic security
apparatus, including state security officials, into tools for advancing his
own interests, undermining the authority of the central leadership.
On Friday, the Beijing government announced that Mr. Liang had been replaced
, but did not say why. Questions about Mr. Liang sent by fax to the city’s
press office on Thursday were not answered.
A businessman whose investments bring him in contact with senior police and
military officers said that they confirmed Mr. Liang’s detention, which the
y said occurred by the first half of January. The businessman spoke on the c
ondition of anonymity, citing, like the two other people who spoke, the risk
of recrimination for discussing delicate political matters.
The detention of Mr. Liang takes the investigation encircling Mr. Zhou into
especially secretive terrain: The Ministry of State Security and its local b
ureaus are unaccountable even by China’s standards and rarely discussed in
public.
In addition to conducting espionage overseas, the service gathers intelligen
ce on officials at home, monitors threats to party control, and keeps foreig
n diplomats and journalists under surveillance. State security officials’ n
ames and comments almost never appear in the media.
As the chief of the city-level state security office in the national capital
, Mr. Liang was “no doubt a very, very powerful guy,” said Christopher K.
Johnson, a specialist on Chinese politics at the Center for Strategic and In
ternational Studies in Washington, who formerly worked as a senior China ana
lyst at the C.I.A.
Mr. Liang’s detention was first reported last month by Mingjing News, an ov
erseas Chinese website specializing in news and speculation about party lead
ers.
Before retiring in November 2012, Mr. Zhou was one of nine men on the Politb
uro Standing Committee — the party’s top decision-making body — and heade
d the committee that oversees China’s courts, police and other arms of dome
stic security. In his five years in those two posts, he accumulated consider
able clout as the party made maintaining social stability a top priority and
devoted ever greater resources to the security forces under his control.
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Political insiders have said senior officials were unsettled by Mr. Zhou’s
tenacious support for Bo Xilai, the former Politburo member who last Septemb
er was sentenced to life imprisonment for corruption and abuse of power.
Pu Zhiqiang, a lawyer in Beijing who has been openly critical of Mr. Zhou, s
aid he had heard that Mr. Liang was “in trouble,” and described the invest
igation as the latest step in Mr. Xi’s efforts to strengthen his control ov
er an enclave of state power where Mr. Zhou had amassed outsize influence.
“Because the party stressed stability above all, and that became fundamenta
l national policy, his power expanded to overshadow other Standing Committee
members, and the police, courts, security authorities became his political
resource,” Mr. Pu said.The government has not publicly announced any invest
igation into Mr. Zhou. But people close to senior officials have said that M
r. Xi and other leaders approved the inquiry late last year. If Mr. Zhou is
tried and convicted of corruption, he would be the first former or sitting m
ember of the Politburo Standing Committee to confront such a fate.
After Mr. Zhou stepped down in late 2012, party anticorruption officials beg
an removing and investigating officials and company executives who had caree
r links with him. They started in Sichuan Province, where Mr. Zhou was party
secretary from 1999 to 2002. The authorities also detained executives, pres
ent and previous, of the China National Petroleum Corporation, or C.N.P.C.,
where Mr. Zhou had risen to become general manager in the 1990s.
In December, the party announced an investigation of a vice minister for pub
lic security, Li Dongsheng, who was appointed while Mr. Zhou was in power.
“I think Xi has been taking a very stepwise approach,” Mr. Johnson, the an
alyst, said of the investigations. “He blew up Sichuan, he blew up C.N.P.C.
, and last December he shifted over into the Ministry of Public Security, an
d so these guys are the next logical target.”
This week, authorities also announced that they were investigating Ji Wenlin
, a vice governor of Hainan Province in southern China, who had served as an
aide to Mr. Zhou for a decade, moving with him from the Ministry of Land an
d Resources to Sichuan Province and then to the Ministry of Public Security.
Mr. Xi appears determined to make a show of methodically dismantling Mr. Zho
u’s influence, said Wu Wei, a former official. He said he had heard rumors
of Mr. Liang’s detention.
“This amounts to pulling out a tiger’s teeth so it turns into a sick cat,”
he said.
Mr. Liang was appointed director of state security for Beijing in 2008, afte
r rising through the ranks of the city bureau, according to a government web
site. At the time, a report in the newspaper Beijing News said he was 42 and
came from Jilin City in northeast China. Since then, few details about his
activities have appeared.
The party investigation of Mr. Zhou, Mr. Liang and others under suspicion ma
y not result in the police filing charges. The police usually take up a crim
inal investigation only after party disciplinary investigators have finished
their inquiry and leaders have recommended such legal proceedings.
“I hope that Zhou Yongkang is publicly tried,” Mr. Wu said. “But I have n
o confidence in that, because the case is so broad and would unleash such bi
g shock waves.”
Chris Buckley reported from Hong Kong, and Jonathan Ansfield from Beijing.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/22/world/asia/corruption-inquiry
hinas-top-security-officials.html
【在 x******g 的大作中提到】 : Page Not Found : We're sorry; we seem to have lost this page, : but we don't want to lose you.
| x******g 发帖数: 33885 | 7 哪一句话说“永康终于被抓了”?
你还不承认是轮子?
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【在 s******y 的大作中提到】 : HONG KONG — A Communist Party corruption investigation focusing on the form : er head of China’s domestic security apparatus has reached into the secreti : ve realm of the intelligence services with the detention of a senior officia : l, people close to party and military leaders said this week. : Liang Ke, the director of the Beijing Municipal Bureau of State Security, wa : s taken into custody last month by the party’s arm for investigating offici : al misconduct, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, according t : o three people this week, who cited information from leaders notified of the : decision. : They said the allegations against Mr. Liang involved corruption as well as h
| s******y 发帖数: 17729 | 8 艹,伪装一把轮子,还得尼玛真让我自焚啊
【在 x******g 的大作中提到】 : 哪一句话说“永康终于被抓了”? : 你还不承认是轮子? : : form : secreti : officia : wa : offici : t : the
| d**********u 发帖数: 3371 | 9 re
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【在 s******y 的大作中提到】 : HONG KONG — A Communist Party corruption investigation focusing on the form : er head of China’s domestic security apparatus has reached into the secreti : ve realm of the intelligence services with the detention of a senior officia : l, people close to party and military leaders said this week. : Liang Ke, the director of the Beijing Municipal Bureau of State Security, wa : s taken into custody last month by the party’s arm for investigating offici : al misconduct, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, according t : o three people this week, who cited information from leaders notified of the : decision. : They said the allegations against Mr. Liang involved corruption as well as h
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