Showing posts with label Bo Xilai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bo Xilai. Show all posts

28 September 2013

解放中国共产党;放了薄熙来!!!!!!!


解放中国共产党;放了薄熙来!!!!!!!!!!Liberate the Chinese Communist Party; Free Bo Xilai!!!!!!!!





解放中国共产党;放了薄熙来!!!!!!!!!!!!Liberate the Chinese Communist Party; Free Bo Xilai!!!!!!!!

22 August 2013

FREE BO XILAI!



http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/bo-xilai-surprisingly-combative-during-trial/2013/08/22/511ce2c2-0b16-11e3-8974-f97ab3b3c677_story.html

THE DENG XIAOPING RUNNING DOGS OF IMPERIALISM ARE PUTTING BO XILAI THROUGH A SHOW TRIAL IN A KANGAROO COURT ON TRUMPED-UP CHARGES.

BO XILAI IS A THREAT TO THE COUNTER-REVOLUTIONARY, ANTI-PARTY CLIQUE THAT USURPED STATE AND PARTY POWER BACK IN 1977.

29 September 2012

薄熙來万岁! -- Long Live Bo Xilai!





http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UD5zpZQk_C8&feature=BFa&list=PLD92CDE98AC325791

FREE BO XILAI! DOWN WITH THE CAPITALIST ROADERS WHO HAVE HIJACKED THE CCP!




FROM XINHUA NEWS AGENCY

Bo Xilai expelled from top legislature


English.news.cn   2012-09-29 13:59:41            
BEIJING, Sept. 29 (Xinhua) -- The Standing Committee of Chongqing Municipal People's Congress has decided to remove Bo Xilai from his post as deputy to the 11th National People's Congress (NPC), China's top legislature, the NPC confirmed on Saturday.
The Credential Committee of the NPC Standing Committee on Friday received a report from the Standing Committee of the Chongqing Municipal People's Congress regarding the decision.
The Credential Committee will submit a report proposing the NPC Standing Committee deliberate the decision.
Bo was expelled from the CPC and removed from public office for severe disciplinary violations after a decision at a meeting of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee on Friday.
The meeting also decided to transfer Bo's suspected law violations and relevant evidence to judicial departments for handling.
Related:
Bo Xilai expelled from CPC, public office
BEIJING, Sept. 28 (Xinhua) -- Bo Xilai has been expelled from the Communist Party of China (CPC) and removed from public office, according to a decision made at a meeting of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee on Friday.
The meeting also yielded the decision to transfer Bo's suspected law violations and relevant evidence to judicial organs for handling. Full story

Commentary: CPC shows no tolerance for corruption
BEIJING, April 19 (Xinhua) -- Vowing thorough investigations into the Wang Lijun incident, the death of Briton Neil Heywood and Bo Xilai's serious violations, the Communist Party of China (CPC) has shown its dedication to the fight against corruption.
The Party's unequivocal and consistent opposition to corruption and the steady, notable new progress made in fighting corruption and upholding integrity provide an important guarantee for advancing reform, opening up, and socialist modernization. Full story
Bo's probe applauded as demonstration of transparency, resolution
BEIJING, April 18 (Xinhua) -- An investigation into ex-senior official Bo Xilai over discipline violations has demonstrated the Communist Party of China's resolution and transparency in self-discipline, officials, scholars and netizens have said.
The CPC Central Committee announced last week that it would suspend Bo's membership in the CPC Central Committee Political Bureau and the CPC Central Committee, as he is suspected of being involved in serious discipline violations. Full story
Commentary: Law and Party disciplines brook no violation
BEIJING, April 14 (Xinhua) -- The recent decision of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee to investigate Bo Xilai's serious discipline violations, and the police reinvestigation of Neil Heywood's death, have garnered wide support from all walks of life in the country.
These moves have been objectively reported by most international media. However, a few overseas media have placed excessive interpretation on the cases and even taking the chance to make inappropriate comments on China's politics. Full story

17 March 2012

Capitalist-Roaders of the Chinese Communist Party




THESE CAPITALIST-ROADERS OF THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY DON'T EVEN KNOW THE WORDS TO THE PARTY'S ANTHEM!  FREE BO XILAI!  RESTORE MAOISM!

12 October 2011

Bo Xilai: China's JFK?

From The Independent

Bo Xilai, China's most charismatic politician, makes a bid for power


Speculation mounts that China's Mr Cool may become a contender

By Clifford Coonan in Beijing

Monday, 8 March 2010


Bo Xilai: has been a big-city mayor, provincial governor and trade tsar



The tall, dapper and smiling Chinese leader looked presidential as he pulled up at the front entrance of the Great Hall of the People, waving photographers and waiting reporters away. Senior members of the Politburo never enter through the front door. But this is Bo Xilai. And when the popular Bo, the mafia-busting Communist Party chief in the south-western city of Chongqing, arrives for the annual National People's Congress, there is a whiff of change. "He is very cool. He's Bo, no?" said one passer-by. At the vast People's Congress which opened in Beijing on Friday and continues until Sunday, Bo is enjoying a moment of celebrity.

It could be a sign that the "princelings" – the children of the 1949 Maoist revolutionaries – are gaining even more political traction in the Chinese power structure. It is an open secret that Mr Bo is seeking promotion to the powerful 9 member Politburo standing committee, the top rank of the leadership, and China watchers believe he is a serious contender.

At 60, Bo is comparatively young, and has done it all in China: he has been a big-city mayor, provincial governor and trade tsar. He is seen as a maverick but even more unusually for a leading Chinese politician, he oozes charisma and charm.



He is also Communist royalty: his father, Bo Yibo, was the last of a group of party leaders who consolidated their power in the 1980s and 1990s, oversaw the Tiananmen Square massacre, and are known as the "Eight Immortals".



The question of whether Bo will rise to the top of the Communist hierarchy is significant because the battle for these posts coincides with a moment when China's new-found international power is upsetting US and European leaders. There are growing concerns about the distorting effects of China's currency, while inside China, rampant corruption and the gap between rich and poor are fuelling protests.



When it came to trade tensions over European socks and Chinese-made bras, Mr Bo has already demonstrated his tough side, facing down the then EU Trade Commissioner, Peter Mandelson. Some say his media-conscious publicity-seeking side will work against him. But this is a man who is no stranger to adversity.



When he was 17, during the Cultural Revolution, he was imprisoned along with members of his family for five years, after which they were placed in a labour camp for another five years. During the Cultural Revolution, Bo's father was imprisoned and tortured for ten years; his mother was beaten to death.



Bo worked at the Hardware Repair Factory for the Beijing Second Light Industry Bureau before he was admitted to the Peking University Department of History, majoring in world history. He later graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree. In 1982, he graduated from the Postgraduate Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences with a Masters.



His father was in charge of a Red Army unit called the "Shanxi Suicide Squad for the Liberation of China", which fought first against the Japanese and then against the Kuomintang in the Civil War, which led to the Revolution of 1949. His son, Bo Guagua, is at Oxford, his picture a fixture on Chinese celebrity websites as he squires willowy beauties to various balls.



Meanwhile, back home Mr Bo likes to present himself as a champion of the ordinary man and a very modern Maoist. In Dalian – the Garden City – one of China's prettiest and most financially successful cities, statuesque women astride horses patrol the city's precincts. Bo Xilai, according to local legend, used the tallest people to help rebrand one of China's burgeoning cities when he was Dalian's mayor.



Last year he also became China's best-known "red texter", sending out 13 million text messages to mobile-phone users bearing quotes from Chairman Mao including: "What really counts in the world is conscientiousness". Recipients relayed the messages 16 million times.