Chinese authorities have arrested a former presidential aide in
a corruption investigation after expelling him from the ruling Communist Party,
the government announced Monday.
Ling Jihua, 58,
who worked for former President
Hu Jintao, stands accused of accepting huge bribes, stealing party and state
secrets, as well as keeping mistresses and trading power for sex, according to
a statement posted on the website of the party's disciplinary arm.
From 2007 to
2012, Ling was the director of the Party's Central Committee's General Office
under Hu -- a position often compared to the White House chief of staff --
making him an extremely powerful politician in China's one party-dominated
political system.
Ling is the latest of a string of former Communist leaders
caught in the anti-corruption dragnet launched by Xi Jinping, the current president and
head of the Communist Party, after he came to power in late 2012.
Xi has vowed to eradicate official corruption, long a
lightning rod for the Chinese public's discontent with the government.
Witch
hunt?
With a stated goal of targeting both
"tigers and flies" -- high- and low-ranking officials -- Xi's massive
campaign has led to thousands of arrests and convictions on graft charges,
including the former domestic
security czar and the military's second-in-command.
"Xi needs
to reassert central control over the party, which seems to have slipped under
his predecessor Hu Jintao," Andrew Wedeman, the director of China Studies
Initiative at Georgia State University, told CNN.
"It isn't a
political witch hunt in the crude sense of that notion, but certainly it's a
highly political campaign."
Throughout the
Hu years, Ling was seen accompanying the Chinese president on trips home and
abroad, and became known as one of his most trusted advisers.
'Ferrari
crash'
Ling's rising political fortune seemed
to come to screeching halt, however, when his only son was reportedly killed in
fiery car accident in Beijing in March 2012.
Juicy details on
the "Ferrari crash" -- including reports of two scantily dressed
female passengers -- as well as Ling's attempt to cover it up were widely
reported by overseas Chinese media.
He was demoted
in the summer of 2012, shortly before Hu handed
power over to Xi.
Last December,
the party's disciplinary arm announced a formal investigation into Ling over
"serious violations of Party regulations," and he was soon stripped
of his official titles.
In addition to
allegedly committing adultery, which is not a crime in China, party
investigators also accused Ling of abusing his position to help his wife's
businesses.
Among his wife
Gu Liping's many reported enterprises is Youth Business China, a self-described
"non-profit education project" aimed at helping startup companies and
young entrepreneurs. Its website lists Gu as a founder and director-general.
Representatives
of the group's offices in Beijing and Chongqing told CNN on Tuesday that their
operations had been suspended by Chinese authorities.
No one answered
the phones during business hours at three other offices in cities located in
Shanxi, Ling's home province in northern China.
Secret
trial?
China's highest prosecution authority
announced Monday that it is now conducting its own investigation into Ling
after party investigators sent over his case.
Political
analysts say, as allegations against him involve state secrets, Ling is likely
to face trial behind closed doors.
This would
shield embarrassing details of the party's inner workings from the public view.
Zhou Yongkang, the former domestic czar who faced similar charges, was tried in
secret in May andsentenced to life in prison in June.
"No
exception should be allowed in graft crackdown," reads a commentary on
Ling's case published in Tuesday's People's Daily, the party's official
newspaper.
"Party rules
and discipline are not only the firewall in the anti-corruption campaign, but
also the party's lifeline."
Wedeman from
Georgia State University said that Xi's campaign had discernibly changed the
atmosphere for China's ruling elite.
"It's hard
to say what the long-term impact is," he said.
"In the
short term, we have a sense that people are scared to death -- and they don't
want to get involved in things they think they might get caught for."
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