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Xi Jinping's anti-corruption campaign
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Zhou Yongkang (left) and Bo Xilai “celebrated their political rapport” and vowed to “play a big game”, the 'China Daily' reports. Photo: Reuters

Disgraced officials Zhou Yongkang and Bo Xilai formed ‘clique’ to challenge leaders: state media

Former security chief Zhou Yongkang and one-time high-flier Bo Xilai formed a “clique” together, state media reports today as President Xi Jinping vows crackdown on Communist Party factionalism.

The two biggest Chinese politicians to fall in recent years, former security chief Zhou Yongkang and one-time high-flier Bo Xilai, formed a “clique” together, state media reported today as President Xi Jinping pledged a crackdown on Communist Party factionalism.

The two men “celebrated their political rapport” and vowed to “play a big game”, the China Daily said, citing a lengthy report in Phoenix Weekly magazine.

The article appears to be the first time that mainland media have reported allegations of a faction formed by the two once-powerful men, long seen as allies by analysts.

China’s ruling party is riven by factional divisions, but consistently seeks to present a united front to outsiders.

Zhou, who was arrested and expelled from the ruling party last month, is the most senior party official to face prosecution since the 1980s, in a fall that sent shock waves through the communist elite.

He moved one step closer to trial last week when the party’s internal watchdog announced that his case had been sent to prosecutors.

Officially the action against Zhou is part of Xi’s much-publicised anti-corruption drive that has targeted both high-level “tigers” as well as low-level “flies”.

However, critics note that China has failed to implement institutional safeguards against corruption, such as public asset disclosure, an independent judiciary, and free media, leaving anti-corruption campaigns subject to the influence of politics.

Bo, meanwhile, fell from grace after a scandal erupted around the 2011 killing of a British businessman, and he was later sentenced to life in prison for graft.

The one-time Communist Party star’s open ambition and hard-charging approach were seen to have led to his expulsion from the ranks – factors that experts say also contributed to Zhou’s downfall.

Last month, after a meeting presided over by Xi, the ruling party’s Central Committee issued a statement warning against factionalism.

“Party members should make party rules their priority, and the party is adopting ‘zero tolerance’ toward cliques and factions within it,” the statement read.

A report by China’s official Xinhua news agency later identified several factions by name, including a group centred on the powerful oil industry, in which Zhou was a key player.

According to the Phoenix Weekly report, Zhou and Bo, the former Communist Party chief in Chongqing, once held a secret meeting at which they advocated “adjusting” the reform and opening-up policy initiated by former leader Deng Xiaoping in the late 1970s.

The policy has propelled China’s economic rise over the past three decades, and the country’s elite 25-member Politburo said in a 2013 statement that it “should be continuous and never stop”.

The Phoenix Weekly report also alleged that in 2012, Zhou tipped off Bo that Bo’s right-hand man, police chief Wang Lijun, had sought asylum at the US consulate in Chengdu – the move that blew open the scandal surrounding his boss.

Several mainland news websites have picked up the Phoenix Weekly report, and yesterday the news portal, NetEase, ran a slideshow of 20 photographs of Zhou, together with Bo and other officials currently being targeted for corruption – some of whom were identified by red circles drawn around their faces.

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