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Top official in China's restive Xinjiang transferred
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 31, 2014


Senior Chinese party official dismissed from post
Beijing (AFP) Dec 31, 2014 - A senior Chinese Communist Party official who was a close aide to former President Hu Jintao has been removed from his post, state media said Wednesday, amid a corruption investigation.

Ling Jihua -- whose son died in a Ferrari crash in Beijing in 2012 -- was dismissed as the head of the United Front Work Department of the party's Central Committee, the official party mouthpiece the People's Daily said in a one-line report.

Anti-corruption authorities have opened an investigation into Ling for "suspected serious disciplinary violations" -- normally a euphemism for corruption -- the official Xinhua News Agency reported last week.

He is also vice chairman of the national committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a top advisory body, although it was not immediately clear if he had also been removed from that post.

Ling found himself in the media spotlight after the death of his son Ling Gu in March 2012.

Two young women who were also in the Ferrari -- one nude and the other partly clothed -- were seriously injured.

Despite a media blackout surrounding the crash, Internet users questioned how the son of a party official could afford a car worth a reported five million yuan (around $800,000).

Ling Jihua was removed from a key party post and given a less high-profile position after the accident, which added to public perceptions in China of corrupt and high-living officials.

A number of his relatives have also fallen, with the party in June announcing an investigation into his brother Ling Zhengce, a former provincial politician, for "serious discipline violations".

News magazine Caixin reported on Monday that his brother-in-law Gu Yuanxiu had also been taken away for investigation on the same vague charges.

The Communist Party's anti-corruption drive began after Xi Jinping took its helm two years ago, with the powerful former security chief Zhou Yongkang being the highest-ranking official ensnared.

The campaign has netted high-level "tigers" as well as low-level "flies", but critics say the faction-ridden ruling party has failed to introduce systemic reforms to prevent corruption such as public disclosure of assets.

The second most senior official in China's strife-torn Xinjiang region has been transferred, reports said Wednesday, after the area saw some of its worst violence in decades.

Nur Bekri will be replaced as the area's vice Communist Party secretary by Shohrat Zakir, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

Both men are Uighurs, the nine-million-strong Turkic-speaking and mostly Muslim ethnic minority which counts Xinjiang as its homeland.

Bekri will become deputy director of the National Development and Reform Commission, China's top economic planning agency, as well as head of the National Energy Agency, Caixin magazine said.

Such a move would make him one of the most powerful ethnic minority members of China's central government.

Violence linked to Xinjiang has intensified over the past year, with at least 200 people killed in a series of clashes and increasingly sophisticated attacks in the resource-rich region and beyond it.

Bekri was appointed to the party post in 2003 and became head of the regional government in 2008, retaining his job even as unrest spiralled, including 2009 riots between Uighurs and China's ethnic majority Han that left about 200 people dead.

Zakir is also likely to replace him as head of the Xinjiang regional government.

The top official in Xinjiang remains Zhang Chunxian, who was appointed as regional party secretary in 2010 after his predecessor was sacked in a move widely seen as a bid to allay public anger following the riots.

Beijing, which blames Xinjiang-related violence on "religious extremists", "separatists" and "terrorists", has responded to the current series of incidents by launching a severe crackdown in recent months, with hundreds of arrests and around 50 death sentences handed down.

The campaign has extended to academics such as prominent Uighur scholar Ilham Tohti, who in September was sentenced to life in prison for "separatism". Seven of Tohti's students have been jailed on the same charge.

Rights groups have condemned the targeting of Tohti, a respected economist and moderate who had long denounced the repression of Uighurs.

They argue that harsh police treatment of the minority as well as government campaigns against religious practices such as the wearing of veils have led to violence.

China denies repression, saying it has brought badly needed modernisation and economic development to the vast and landlocked region bordering Central Asia.


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