China’s Richest Man Jailed for 14 Years
The Epoch Times
Staff Created: May 21, 2010 Last Updated: May 23, 2010
Huang Guangyu, former chairman of China’s second-largest electronics and appliance retailer, was sent to jail for alleged illegal business operations, insider trading, and bribery charges.
The case highlights the complex relationship between business entrepreneurs and regime officials in China.
Forty-year-old Huang Guangyu, who was once China’s richest man and the founder of GOME Electrical Appliances Holding Ltd., was convicted of illegally trading 822 million Hong Kong dollars (US$105,384,612) between September and November 2007. He was sentenced to 14 years in jail on Tuesday.
The Beijing No. 2 Intermediate People’s Court also fined Huang 600 million yuan (US$88 million) and seized another 200 million yuan (US$29 million) in assets, according to state-run Xinhua News Agency.
Huang was also accused of insider trading of shares as the major shareholder in the Shenzhen-listed Beijing Centergate Technologies (Holding) Co., Ltd., with a total trade value of more than 1.415 billion yuan (US$207 million), between April and September 2007. He allegedly gained a trading profit of more than 309 million yuan (US$45 million).
Huang was found guilty of directly bribing or instigating others to bribe five police and taxation officials with 4.56 million yuan (US$667,000) in cash and properties from 2006 to 2008, in exchange for improper benefits for his two firms GOME and Beijing Pengrun Real Estate Development Company.
These firms were also fined 5 million and 1.2 million yuan (US$732,000 and US$176,000), respectively, for committing a corporate bribery offence.
Huang was detained by Beijing police in November 2008 for an investigation into allegations of stock market manipulation. On April 22, after 17 months in custody, Huang went on trial at the Beijing No. 2 Intermediate Court.
According to a CNN report, one of those officials, Xiang Huaizhu, a former deputy director of the Economic Crime Investigation Bureau of the Ministry of Public Security, went on trial in March on charges of taking 1.06 million yuan (US$155,234) from Huang. Yet Xiang’s verdict has not been announced so far.
Collusion
Huang Guangyu’s case, which has been widely reported by Chinese media and overseas news agencies, has once again been drawing attention to the obscure world of Chinese entrepreneurs and their relationships with regime officials.
The BBC said in a report that this is not an isolated case but one of the biggest corruption scandals in China: “For some, the prosecution of Huang Guangyu will show that the government is serious about fighting corruption. But it is unclear whether or not this one case will lessen corrupt practices elsewhere in the country. After all, major figures from government and business have been convicted before without any noticeable effect on the levels of corruption.” more …







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