|
Corruption
Commerce official Guo Jingyi convicted: fallout from Huang GuangyuPosted by Jeremy Goldkorn on Friday, May 21, 2010 at 9:45 AM
![]() Guo Jingyi, took 1.1 million yuan from Gome - image source The China Daily reports:
The Gome Group is the company founded by billionaire Huang Guangyu, famously once China's richest man, just recently sentenced to 14 years behind bars for insider trading and corrupt business practices. Other offiicials caught up in a web of corruption with Guo Jingyi are Liu Wei, a former official from the State Administration for Industry and Commerce and Xu Gangman, a former official in the State Administration of Foreign Exchange. Liu and Xu have both been detained and investigated, but not yet sentenced. It is not clear whethere Liu and Xu have any connection to Gome or Huang Guangyu, but whatever they've done together with Guo Jingyi is bound to come out in the two years he'll spend in jail contemplating a death sentence. If he has not spilled the dirt on them already. Links and Sources
|
Partner Links
Jobs in China
Recent Comments
Henry on
The Eurasian Face
Caroline W on
Big in China
Michael on
Julia Lovell on translating Lu Xun's complete fiction: "His is an angry, searing vision of China"
Brandon K. on
Clueless academic takes on popular fantasy novels
China Media Timeline
Major media events over the last three decades
Danwei Model Workers
The latest recommended blogs and new media
From 2008
Books on China
The Eurasian Face : Blacksmith Books, a publishing house in Hong Kong, is behind The Eurasian Face, a collection of photographs by Kirsteen Zimmern. Below is an excerpt from the series:
Big in China: An adapted excerpt from Big In China: My Unlikely Adventures Raising A Family, Playing The Blues and Becoming A Star in China, just published this month. Author Alan Paul tells the story of arriving in Beijing as a trailing spouse, starting a blues band, raising kids and trying to make sense of China.
Pallavi Aiyar's Chinese Whiskers: Pallavi Aiyar's first novel, Chinese Whiskers, a modern fable set in contemporary Beijing, will be published in January 2011. Aiyar currently lives in Brussels where she writes about Europe for the Business Standard. Below she gives permissions for an excerpt.
Front Page of the Day
A different newspaper every weekday
From the Vault
Classic Danwei posts
+ Korean history doesn't fly on Chinese TV screens (2007.09): SARFT puts the kibbosh on Korean historical dramas. + Religion and government in an uneasy mix (2008.03): Phoenix Weekly (凤凰周刊) article from October, 2007, on government influence on religious practice in Tibet. + David Moser on Mao impersonators (2004.10): I first became aware of this phenomenon in 1992 when I turned on a Beijing TV variety show and was jolted by the sight of "Mao Zedong" and "Zhou Enlai" playing a game of ping pong. They both gave short, rousing speeches, and then were reverently interviewed by the emcee, who thanked them profusely for taking time off from their governmental duties to appear on the show.
Danwei Archives
Danwei Feeds
Via Feedsky
or Feedburner |





