China jails outspoken tycoon Ren Zhiqiang for 18 years

By: Bloomberg | Updated: September 22, 2020 1:20:58 pm Ren Zhiqiang in 2009. (Photographer:Nelson Ching

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By: Bloomberg | Updated: September 22, 2020 1:20:58 pm
Ren Zhiqiang, Ren Zhiqiang jailed, Ren Zhiqiang china, chinese businessman jailed, Huayuan Property, china newsRen Zhiqiang in 2009. (Photographer:Nelson Ching/Bloomberg)

China jailed outspoken property tycoon Ren Zhiqiang for 18 years on graft charges, months after he was linked to an article criticizing President Xi Jinping’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak.

The former chairman of Huayuan Property Co. was sentenced Tuesday after pleading guilty to four charges including corruption and abuse of power, the No.2 Beijing Intermediate People’s Court said. Ren was found to have amassed some 132 million yuan ($19 million) in bribes and other ill-gotten personal benefits between 2003 and 2017, the court said, adding that he had agreed not to appeal.

The allegations also included causing some 117 million yuan of economic losses at unspecified state-owned companies, according to the court, which provided no details about the crimes. Ren was fined 4.2 million yuan.

The prison term was unusually long, although some figures targeted during Xi’s eight-year anti-corruption campaign have been given suspended death sentences. If he serves out his full sentence, Ren, 69, would be about 87 years old by the time of his release.

Shares of Huayuan Property were unchanged as of 1:01 p.m. in Shanghai after falling as much as 1.7% earlier on Tuesday.

Less Patience

The trial sent a warning to any would-be critics of Xi, who has run China since 2012 and amassed more power than any Communist Party leader since Mao Zedong. Ren — the “princeling” son of a former top Commerce Ministry official — built a reputation for sharp commentary on the social media platform Weibo before he criticized Xi’s demands for greater loyalty from state media in 2016 and was suspended from the party.

The businessman has been under investigation since March, when he was widely speculated to be the source of an anonymous article blaming a “crisis of governance” for early efforts to cover up the coronavirus in Wuhan. The piece warned against a growing concentration of power, describing the country’s “great leader” as a “clown with no clothes who was still determined to play emperor.”

While Xi initially urged officials to “understand, tolerate and pardon” some outbursts after the virus lockdowns, authorities have shown less patience since the pandemic put China’s decades-long economic boom at risk. A prominent Tsinghua University law professor was placed under house arrest after publishing an essay criticizing one-man rule, while a retired Central Party School professor lost her pension after giving a speech urging a change of leader.

Authorities have levied an escalating series of charges against Ren, saying in July that he had been found in possession of “golf club memberships” and was “colluding with his children to accumulate wealth without restraint.” He was accused of “smearing the party and country’s image, distorting the party and the military history, being disloyal and dishonest with the party.” Ren was also expelled from the party, usually the final step before prosecution.

Some of Ren’s supporters have expressed doubt about the allegations, arguing that Ren underwent an audit before stepping down from his post at Huayuan Property in 2011 that should have found wrongdoing. The company said in 2015 that a review of the audit report had been approved.

The proceedings against Ren came days after Xi hailed China’s success in suppressing the virus at a pomp-filled ceremony in Beijing. The record, he said, proved the merits of one-party rule.

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