Beijing paper's investigative report on Zhou Yongkang's son censored
Chinese censors have deleted an investigative report on the son of China’s former security tsar Zhou Yongkang only hours after it appeared on Wednesday.
Critical articles on senior leaders and their children have been unthinkable in the past. Zhou Yongkang served as a member of the Communist Party’s Politburo Standing Committee until 2012 and is understood to be the highest-profile target of a graft investigation in China in recent history.
The Beijing News article on Wednesday alleged that the younger Zhou’s right-hand man in petroleum deals, Mi Xiaodong, was also involved in a public housing project. Mi was detained by graft investigators in early October last year.
Through interviews dating back to December and using Beijing company filings, Beijing News reporters traced the project to a series of companies owned by Zhou’s mother-in-law, Zhan Minli, and Mi.
Zhou and Mi’s ties date back to their time as roommates at Southwest Petroleum University in Chengdu, the report alleges.
Qiuhai Xurong Real Estate Development, a company controlled by Mi and Liu’s mother-in-law, was awarded the right to build 2,012 apartments on land in Beijing's northern suburbs, the Beijing News reported. Nankou State Farm, which held rights to the land for the housing project, held a minority stake in the company that was awarded the contract.
In 2010, Zhou Bin’s two associates sold their share to a third company, the report said, passing on the buck to develop the site. Construction has since stalled, the newspaper said, citing a man tending goats at the construction site.
If the newspaper's published stories have been deleted in the past, the Beijing Internet Information Office was to blame, a person familiar with the matter said. Searches for Zhou Bin's name are blocked on Chinese social media sites.
However, several major Chinese news portals, including Sina.com.cn, and the website of the official Xinhua News Agency, also carried the same report on Wednesday, and they were still accessible as of Wednesday afternoon.
The younger Zhou has contacted several lawyers seeking legal assistance over possible bribery charges, sources have told the Post.
The probe surrounding Zhou Yongkang and his associates has been widening, with another round of senior officials and state enterprise executives tied to Zhou detained in recent weeks.