BEIJING
- A sensational political scandal
unfolding in China has exposed the high level of impunity enjoyed by elites at
a time when social tensions are rising, highlighting the need for change,
observers say.
The
affair - which toppled Bo Xilai, one of the Communist Party's stars, and
prompted authorities to probe his wife for murder - has played out in an
unusually public manner despite the best efforts of China's censors.
There
have been scant official announcements about the case, but allegations of
massive corruption and abuse of power involving Bo and his family have trickled
through online to Chinese people already weary of graft scandals.
"The
Bo Xilai case clearly shows that corruption among some of the most powerful
leaders can be horrendous," said Sidney Rittenberg, an American who spent
decades in China and gained first-hand insight into the party's workings.
"Today,
officials who genuinely want to fight corruption, including some at the very
top, are often in a minority and lack the power to clean out those Augean
Stables," he said, referring to the daunting task of Greek mythology.
"Along
with the necessary economic decentralization and the end of a centralized
command economy, local officials are able to pretty much rule the roost in the
areas under their command."
Bo was
sacked from his post as boss of the southwestern city of Chongqing last month,
and subsequently suspended from the party's top-level, 25-member Politburo for
"serious discipline violations" - code in China for graft.
His
wife Gu Kailai, meanwhile, has been placed under investigation for the suspected
murder of a British businessman - a scandal that came to light when Bo's
right-hand man fled to a US consulate and reportedly asked for asylum.
The
saga reads like a Hollywood thriller and has gripped ordinary Chinese people,
some of whom thought the charismatic Bo was a refreshing change from the
country's stiff, technocratic leaders.
Jiang
Weiping, a journalist who was jailed for five years in 2000 after writing
articles critical of Bo and Gu, says he caught wind of their corrupt practices
in the early 1990s when Bo was propaganda chief of Dalian city.
He
alleges that Gu raked in money through initiatives such as setting up a company
to facilitate foreign investment in the northeastern city or through donations
given to a research institute she established.
Later,
their son Bo Guagua was able to study abroad in Britain, where he attended the
prestigious Harrow school and then went to Oxford University.
Jiang
also alleges that Bo managed to secure his rise through the ranks by giving key
officials benefits such as land or tax incentives, thus shoring up high-level
support.
After
arriving in Chongqing, Bo drew criticism for launching a draconian crackdown on
criminal elements in 2009 that led to a series of executions and suicides, amid
allegations of widespread torture and false confessions.
"He
is two-faced. On the one hand, he is very talented and charming, but on the
other, he is a conspirator... He has the gift of the gab and he is a great
showman," Jiang, who now lives in Canada, told AFP.
The Bo
case has been described as the biggest political crisis to hit China in decades
as it exposes deep-set power struggles within the party, although other
high-profile corruption cases have also emerged over the past years.
Former
Shanghai boss Chen Liangyu, for instance, was jailed for 18 years in 2008 for
his role in a pension fund scandal, and former Beijing mayor Chen Xitong was
removed from his post in 1995 for corruption and jailed for 16 years.
But
China watchers say the economic and social situation is now very different from
when those two top officials were convicted, and Bo's case - while not a
trigger - may still bring to the fore the need for reforms.
"People
in China with whom I have communicated - people of many different viewpoints
and loyalties - all concede that some political reform is now necessary,"
said Rittenberg, a consultant who spent decades working closely with Chinese
leaders including Mao Zedong.
Much of
the party's legitimacy in recent years has rested on China's breakneck economic
growth - which is able to pull people out of poverty - but this is slowing and
the growth model is becoming unsustainable.
Social
tensions are on the rise, with land grabs one of the most volatile issues,
triggering violent protests when farmers who have been forcibly evicted from
their land have no recourse to legal arbitration.
Cheng
Li, an expert on Chinese elite politics and a fellow at the Brookings
Institution, says the party needs to make "profound transformations"
if it wants to "regain the public's confidence and remain in power."
He said
in an interview with the US-based National Bureau of Asian Research published
Wednesday that there should be a call for widespread legal reforms, intra-party
elections for leadership positions and media openness.
"The
Bo Xilai crisis can be either a curse or blessing for the CCP (Chinese
Communist Party) - a curse if the party pretends that its rule can remain as
before, but a blessing if the party decides to transform itself," he said.
AFP
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