The Borneo Post

Exiled billionair­e assailed by businessma­n who says he was framed for crimes

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BEIJING: China’s highest profile fugitive, exiled billionair­e Guo Wengui, is under attack from a former business partner who claims Guo got him framed for crimes he says he did not commit.

After having a conviction for embezzling 855 million yuan ( US$ 130 million) from a company owned by Guo quashed, Qu Long told Reuters he is out for revenge.

“When he returns I will sue him in China,” Qu said of Guo, two days after being released from jail where he served six years of a 15year sentence. “If he can’t return, I will sue him in the United States. As long as he is on the face of this Earth, I will find a lawyer and make him pay.”

In its ruling last Tuesday, the Hebei High People’s Court said there was not enough evidence to support the embezzleme­nt conviction.

Qu’s interview with Reuters was arranged by the Chinese authoritie­s, who also provided briefings by three members of a special police taskforce investigat­ing Guo, who is living in New York. Chinese officials told Reuters they wanted to get Qu’s narrative out through the Western media to counteract a barrage of internet postings by Guo.

The officials and police involved in the case told Reuters that after an investigat­ion that began in 2015 they had discovered that the charges against Qu were fabricated by Guo and government officials Guo had allegedly bribed, including Ma Jian, the former counter-intelligen­ce chief at China’s spy agency, the Ministry of State Security.

Ma was put under investigat­ion for alleged corruption in 2015 and was expelled from the Communist Party the following year. He remains in detention and Reuters was unable to reach him for comment.

Guo did not respond to requests for comment about Qu. Guo’s New York-based lawyer, Josh Schiller, said Qu’s threat was “further persecutio­n of Guo in order to silence his speech”.

Guo, who left China in late 2014 shortly before Ma was detained, has previously denied bribing government officials and says accusation­s levelled against him are politicall­y motivated.

The police and other Chinese officials who talked to Reuters provided no evidence to support their bribery assertions in the case. Reuters was unable to independen­tly confirm whether Guo engaged in any wrongdoing.

Guo is currently living in a 68 million apartment overlookin­g Manhattan from where he has been using social media to make a series of incendiary, though mostly unverifiab­le, claims of corruption in the top levels of the Chinese government.

His campaign has been timed for maximum impact ahead of next month’s critical congress of the ruling Communist Party, which is held only once every five years.

The Chinese authoritie­s are trying to repatriate Guo, who applied for US political asylum earlier this month.

In April, at Beijing’s request, Interpol issued a ‘ red notice’ seeking Guo’s arrest on corruption­related charges. – AFP

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Qu Long

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