Bo Xilai is waiting to be tried, and the Chinese Communist Party is trying to decide how to confront the atrocities of organ harvesting he took part in. Coverups and scapegoating will not hide the guilt of Jiang Zemin for Bo Xilai’s crimes.
The fate of the disgraced former Politburo member Bo Xilai has engrossed Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leaders since his police chief, Wang Lijun, attempted to defect to the United States on Feb. 6. At issue is not Bo’s individual fate, but rather how widely other CCP officials are implicated in Bo’s crimes.
When the now-disgraced former Chinese Communist Party (CCP) chief of Chongqing, Bo Xilai, was courting his first wife, Li Danyu, he wrote her a love poem.
The trial of Gu Kailai for the murder of British businessman Neil Heywood had not considered the real reasons for the crime, which are tied up in a 13-year-long collaboration in profiting from the bodies of Falun Gong practitioners.
An important element of the Chinese Communist Party’s penetration and control of Chinese society has been its ability to have all state-owned enterprises (SOE) and work units subscribe to its newspapers.
China is now having a boom in subway construction; small or large, every other city is aspiring to build a rapid transit railway network. China Youth Daily reported on July 20 that China’s State Council has approved the subway construction plans for 28 cities.
In November, 2004 The Epoch Times published an editorial series called Nine Commentaries on the Communist Party, which takes an unsparing look at the nature, history, and crimes of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
The extreme shortage of legitimate organs in China means the illegal organ trade is strong. An organ broker says there are people in his trade at every transplant hospital in Beijing. It’s an open secret.