The Borneo Post

Billionair­e Guo Wengui wants regime change in Beijing

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NEW YORK: From a luxury Manhattan apartment, Chinese billionair­e Guo Wengui is plotting a ‘change of the regime’ in Beijing and developing a new media platform with the aim of introducin­g democracy in the world’s most populous country.

The fugitive real estate mogul settled in April in New York, on the 18th floor of a hotel facing Central Park, where he’s now waiting with his wife for a decision on his claim for US political asylum.

“I want to try and to have rule of law, I want to try and have democracy, freedom, that’s my ultimate goal... A change of the regime,” he told AFP in a recent exclusive interview. He’s set a timeline of three years.

For several months, Guo has been flooding social networks with searing accusation­s of corruption against China’s rich and powerful.

Few Chinese tycoons choose dissent. But Guo, whose property was seized and two brothers imprisoned since he fled from China in 2014, says his campaign has been brewing for 28 years.

Amid the crackdown on prodemocra­cy protesters on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989, “my little brother died in front of me... I was detained for 22 months.”

It was in prison that he decided to ‘ wrestle with this system under the Communist party that is inhumane, not democratic, unlawful’.

While some accuse the businessma­n, who is not shy about publicizin­g his ostentatio­us lifestyle, of hypocrisy in his allegation­s of corruption among China’s political elite, Guo denies accusation­s that he himself is also guilty of graft.

“Why would I do this? I don’t need the money, I have money,” he said, ticking off possession­s such as apartments in New York and London and a yacht, as well as ‘a wonderful family’.

“But I am a Buddhist, I want to be kind to other people... I want to change the evil regime,” said Guo, who gives his age as 47 despite uncertaint­y about his birthdate due to the upheaval of the Cultural Revolution in China at the time.

“All the successful businessme­n in China, there are only two fates for them: one is to flee the country, the other is waiting to be eliminated.”

He chose to go on the offensive, posting unsubstant­iated yet politicall­y sensitive allegation­s.

His Twitter account, which has nearly 480,000 followers, has been repeatedly blocked since China’s Communist Party congress in October, he said.

Undeterred, Guo has been developing a new media platform that he intends to launch before the end of December to expose the flaws of China’s Communist regime.

Guo has developed a relationsh­ip in the US that seems unexpected — with Steve Bannon, US President Donald Trump’s former strategist who has called for Washington to wage ‘ economic war’ with China.

“He is one of the best internatio­nal political experts I have ever seen. Mr Bannon is one of the very few Westerners who really understand­s Asia,” said Guo.

Guo said he has met ten times with Bannon, the one-time Goldman Sachs investment banker and head of influentia­l ultraconse­rvative outlet Breitbart News and that they have discussed his new platform, which he did not describe in detail. — AFP

 ??  ?? Guo Wengui poses at his New York City apartment. — AFP photo
Guo Wengui poses at his New York City apartment. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Jeffrey Feltman
Jeffrey Feltman

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