Vancouver Sun

CHINESE BILLIONAIR­E JAILED FOR 18 YEARS

- SOPHIA YAN

BEIJING • A Chinese billionair­e who was an outspoken critic of the Communist Party has been jailed for 18 years as the latest high-profile executive targeted in a crackdown on dissent.

Sun Dawu, who made his fortune in animal husbandry, was found guilty of eight charges including “picking quarrels and provoking troubles,” a charge used frequently to pursue dissidents and human rights activists.

The 67-year-old businessma­n was one of the few to accuse the Chinese government of attempting to cover up the extent of African swine flu, which infected one of his farms in 2019 and decimated the country's pig population.

The crisis was so serious that Chinese authoritie­s had to tap into the nation's strategic reserves to ensure a continued supply of pork, one of the nation's most popular meats.

The case for which Sun was on trial was linked to a land dispute with a local government-owned farm, according to media reports. Employees of his company, Dawu Group, tried to petition local regulators to assist in resolving the dispute. However, the authoritie­s detained him instead, as well as some of his relatives and employees.

Sun worked for a stateowned bank before launching his own business, starting with 50 pigs and 1,000 chickens, and building it into an agricultur­al empire with thousands of employees. The billionair­e farmer is the latest to fall foul of Beijing as it intensifie­s its campaign against critics of the ruling Communist

Party.

His arrest is one of many signs displaying the Chinese government's increasing intoleranc­e of dissent at any level, including well-known business executives.

Sun's lengthy sentence comes as China seeks to exert greater control over the private sector at a time when many Chinese companies have grown exponentia­lly, with some seeking to list publicly overseas.

Along with a spate of new regulation­s for the technology and education industries, China has also handed down multi-billion-dollar fines to major firms like Alibaba, the e-commerce company, a message that Beijing won't allow any corporatio­n or individual to gain too much influence or compete with the party.

Last year, Ren Zhiqiang, a retired property mogul, was sentenced to 18 years in prison after he wrote an essay online accusing Xi

PICKING QUARRELS AND PROVOKING TROUBLES.

Jinping, the Chinese leader, of mishandlin­g the COVID outbreak, and calling him “a clown.”

It was a bold move for Chinese authoritie­s to go after a well-regarded party member with ties to the political elite, signalling that the government would continue muzzling critical voices.

In 2018, another Chinese tycoon, Wu Xiaohui, who was chairman of a major insurance firm that purchased New York's legendary Waldorf Astoria hotel, was also sentenced to 18 years amid allegation­s that he had defrauded investors.

At the time, experts viewed Wu's downfall as part of a wider campaign to reassert control over private companies that had ramped up the purchase of assets abroad, contributi­ng to the flight of capital and potentiall­y underminin­g domestic financial stability.

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 ?? NOEL CELIS / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? A Chinese court has sentenced pig farmer and billionair­e Sun Dawu to 18 years in jail this week for a catalogue of crimes including “provoking trouble” after the outspoken tycoon and grassroots rights supporter was tried in secret. He is one of several businessme­n charged in recent years.
NOEL CELIS / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES A Chinese court has sentenced pig farmer and billionair­e Sun Dawu to 18 years in jail this week for a catalogue of crimes including “provoking trouble” after the outspoken tycoon and grassroots rights supporter was tried in secret. He is one of several businessme­n charged in recent years.

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