Representing purged “tigers” in court isn’t glamorous or pays well, but Chinese lawyers do it anyway.
Following the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) 18th Party Congress, held in late 2012, a disproportionate number of Chinese officials have “died of unnatural causes,” according to a recent notice by the Party’s Organization Department.
Six communist party officials responsible for the drowning of Yu Qiyi, an executive who worked for a state-run company, are now standing trial in China.
Lü Zijiang, local official from Zhejiang, is a victim of the violence being perpetrated in the anticorruption campaign launched early this year by the new Party administration.
Representing purged “tigers” in court isn’t glamorous or pays well, but Chinese lawyers do it anyway.
Following the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) 18th Party Congress, held in late 2012, a disproportionate number of Chinese officials have “died of unnatural causes,” according to a recent notice by the Party’s Organization Department.
Six communist party officials responsible for the drowning of Yu Qiyi, an executive who worked for a state-run company, are now standing trial in China.
Lü Zijiang, local official from Zhejiang, is a victim of the violence being perpetrated in the anticorruption campaign launched early this year by the new Party administration.