Daily Mail

Truth must come out over poisoned Briton, Cameron to tell China

- By Tim Shipman, Vanessa Allen and Peter Simpson in Beijing

DAVID Cameron will today tell China’s leaders that Britain demands justice over the murder of British businessma­n Neil heywood.

The Prime Minister will raise the case with one of the most senior members of the Chinese Communist Party in Downing Street.

It was claimed yesterday that Old harrovian Mr heywood was poisoned after he threatened to expose a powerful politician’s wife for smuggling money abroad.

Sources said police investigat­ing his murder believe the 41-year- old helped ‘soulmate’ Gu Kailai to siphon millions out of China but the relationsh­ip turned sour when she accused him of taking too large a cut of the cash.

Allegation­s that his death was orchestrat­ed by Mrs Gu have prompted a scandal in China, where her husband Bo Xilai was a senior politician and expected to win a place in the national leadership later this year.

No 10 officials warned that a successful conclusion to the case is very important for Anglo-chinese relations and that the Government wants to see the truth revealed about how Mr heywood died.

Mr Cameron will raise the stakes today when he discusses the case with Li Changchun, propaganda chief of the Communist Party. he will welcome the start of a formal investigat­ion into Mr heywood’s death but make clear there should be no cover-up.

No 10 sources said Mr Cameron would make a ‘tacit offer of help’ but would stop short of demanding British police involvemen­t in the case because of its diplomatic difficulti­es.

Mr Changchun is the youngest member of the nine-man standing committee of the Chinese politburo and is in charge of relations with foreign political parties.

The move follows criticism that British officials failed to push China for an investigat­ion into Mr heywood’s death last November, which was initially blamed on excess alcohol and a heart attack.

his body was found in a hotel room in the south-western Chinese city of Chongqing where Bo Xilai, 62, was Communist Party secretary. Police believe he was given a drink laced with cyanide. Foreign Office minister Jeremy Browne was on an official visit to China at the time and met Mr Bo, but officials said no ministers were briefed about the death until February.

Chinese officials have previously refused to reveal details of the investigat­ion, meaning rumour and speculatio­n has been rife on the internet. But key details were finally released yesterday after two sources close to the investigat­ion told journalist­s Mrs Gu, 54, asked Mr heywood to move a large sum of money last year, and became angry when he demanded a cut of the cash.

Mr heywood allegedly threatened to expose the secret financial deals if his demands were not met – a threat which would have jeopard- ised Mr Bo’s ambitions for higher office in China. A source said: ‘heywood told her that if she thought he was being too greedy, then he didn’t need to become involved and wouldn’t take a penny of the money, but he also said he could expose it.’

Mr Bo is now under house arrest and faces a Communist Party investigat­ion into ‘serious disciplina­ry violations’, and his wife has been named as a suspect in the heywood case and handed over to judicial authoritie­s.

Chongqing businessma­n Wang Kang denied previous unsubstant­iated reports that Mrs Gu and Mr heywood were involved in a love affair but said they did have a close relationsh­ip. he said: ‘Bo and Gu had not been a proper husband and wife for years. Gu and heywood had a deep personal relationsh­ip and she took the break between them to heart.

‘her mentality was “You betrayed me, and so I’ll get my revenge”.’

Mr heywood, a father of two, told friends he feared for his life after a confrontat­ion with Mrs Gu in which he refused her demand that he divorce his Chinese wife and swear a Mafia-style oath of allegiance to her.

The case is expected to be raised in Parliament today when the Government will face questions over why diplomats did not push their Chinese counterpar­ts for an earlier investigat­ion into the death.

The picture speaks volumes: a damning snapshot of British impotence and Chinese intransige­nce. A government minister sits grinning for the camera in his pac-a-mac like an excited child at the zoo, while beside him a plump panda munches insouciant­ly on a carrot.

The politician with the smug smile is Jeremy Browne, a leading Liberal Democrat and the second most senior minister in the Foreign Office.

he was engaging in the latest bout of ‘panda diplomacy’, with a five-day tour of China to promote investment opportunit­ies for British business — plus, of course, the requisite trip to a bear sanctuary.

Among the stops was the southweste­rn city of Chongqing, where he spent time chatting to the local Communist Party capo, Bo Xilai.

even as they met, however, police were passing on details about the mysterious death of Neil heywood, a British citizen seemingly poisoned with potassium cyanide in a hotel room nearby.

Nothing was said, of course, that might rattle the cosy cups of tea and talk of trade deals. Now, it has emerged, the prime suspect in the probable murder is Mr Bo’s wealthy wife, with reports Mr heywood was threatenin­g to expose her network of corrupt dealings.

The married couple ran the city like their personal fiefdom before Mr Bo’s fall from grace in recent days.

We may never discover exactly what happened in the lonely last moments of Mr heywood’s life. The Old harrovian’s body was hastily cremated, ensuring the destructio­n of any conclusive evidence of how he met his death. his family was first told he died of heart failure, then of alcohol poisoning.

Silence

It is a strange saga. But what makes it even more surreal, even more shocking, is the slothfulne­ss with which the Foreign Office has reacted to such a suspicious death involving a prosperous British businessma­n — possibly one with intelligen­ce links as well as close and well-advertised connection­s to the rising star of Chinese politics.

Almost immediatel­y, British businessme­n based in China raised concerns with consular officials, urging an inquiry into the 41-year-old’s death.

They pointed out he was fit, healthy and a light drinker. But they hit a wall of silence.

even worse, it was revealed that — incredibly — a senior British diplomat stood alongside two Chinese police officers, watching the disposal of the body.

The cremation took place on the day Mr Browne flew home, no doubt delighted with his successful trip cuddling up to the Chinese dragon.

Scandalous­ly, it took Britain three months to raise even the most basic questions over Mr heywood’s death with Chinese officials, despite a chain of events that should have set the loudest alarm bells ringing in Whitehall.

British officials only acted after rumours hit the internet and began to appear in the Press.

It is hard to avoid the conclusion that Britain’s diplomats are more concerned with the welfare of pandas than the welfare of British people; after all, they pulled out all the stops to help ship a breeding pair to edinburgh Zoo at a cost of £600,000 a year.

Little wonder senior MPS from all three major parties are now raising questions over the inept and shameful response.

The Foreign Office, it is worth pointing out, proclaims its duty to protect British citizens around the world on its own website. Sadly, it has failed to meet such noble aims.

‘ It beggars belief that a Foreign Office minister met up with a major figure in this titanic struggle for the fate of China only days after the suspicious death of a British citizen, who appears to have been put to death as a disposable pawn,’ said Labour’s Denis Macshane. he is absolutely right. The desperate search for economic growth drives such subservien­t dealings with this emerging Asian superpower, just as it drives so much British foreign policy.

Only two per cent of British exports go to China, and ministers are — rightly — determined to boost this.

But it is hard to imagine our rivals, such as France, Israel or the U. S., being so timid and tongue- tied in similar circumstan­ces.

The Foreign Office, however, seems to believe even the murder of a British citizen cannot jeopardise its hard work sucking up to Communist Party bigwigs.

After all, China’s shameful repression in Tibet, its censorship of the internet, the jailing of dissident artist Ai Weiwei even as his work was being exhibited in the Tate Modern, have never been allowed to derail the panda diplomacy.

This is far from the first evidence of such Foreign Office failures. As Macshane — himself a former Foreign Office minister — put it to me, Whitehall believes trade is so important that human rights and the odd dead Briton are seen as acceptable ‘collateral damage’.

This can be seen in the hypocritic­al way we launched a war to liberate Libya, but ignored the continuing repression in Bahrain and carried on selling arms to Saudi Arabia, despite its treatment of women and funding of Islamic extremism.

Plot

The latest case bears striking similariti­es with the muted official reaction to the murder of Alexander Litvinenko, the Russian exile poisoned with radioactiv­e chemicals six years ago in a Japanese restaurant in central London.

Litvinenko fled to Britain for sanctuary after upsetting President Vladimir Putin by revealing an assassinat­ion plot against a British-based billionair­e.

Yet Britain meekly accepted the refusal of Russia to hand over the main murder suspect, who is a former security officer turned-millionair­e member of parliament.

Just as it meekly accepted a one- sided extraditio­n treaty with the U.S., under which American prosecutor­s use terror laws to target Britons accused of white-collar crimes — such as Asperger’s sufferer Gary Mckinnon, accused of hacking military computers in search of UFO evidence.

Unfortunat­ely, those paid to fight for British interests have a poor record in protecting the interests of ordinary people caught up in terrible circumstan­ces in foreign lands.

About 6,000 Britons die abroad each year, with one in six deaths from unnatural causes.

At the weekend, the father of Meredith Kercher, the British student murdered in Italy, was the latest to lambast lack of support from the Foreign Office.

even the Prime Minister has been frustrated by this hapless and often hopeless reaction to helping Britons in trouble.

David Cameron had to apologise last year after embarrassi­ngly cack-handed attempts to rescue people stranded by the Libyan uprising.

The Foreign Office dithered over finding aircraft, while France sent in its air force to evacuate 556 of its citizens, and Germany sent in three warships.

Mr Cameron would do well to take a long, hard look at the Foreign Office.

Blunders

Its inept response to the apparent murder of a wellconnec­ted Briton in China is just the latest in a series of humiliatin­g blunders, such as its over- enthusiast­ic support for Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi and obsession with a disastrous war in Afghanista­n.

Perhaps this is because successive government­s have cut back its influence, slashed its budgets and been obsessed with exporting floods of aid money rather than the finest diplomats prepared to stand up for British interests.

As a result, the budget of Kent County Council is now bigger than that of the Foreign Office, while in several key embassies — including egypt and, at one point last year, Afghanista­n — no one even speaks the local language.

A new generation of activist diplomats is being restrained by an old guard of complacent mandarins, seemingly happy to perpetuate the ideals of Lord Salisbury, the 19thcentur­y Prime Minister who said British foreign policy ‘ is to float lazily down the stream, occasional­ly putting out a diplomatic boat hook to avoid collisions’. This is no longer good enough. It is one thing to engage in panda diplomacy. It is quite another to pander to people involved in corruption, cover-up and the death of a British citizen in the most suspicious circumstan­ces.

 ??  ?? Centre of scandal: Gu Kailai
Centre of scandal: Gu Kailai
 ??  ?? Photocall: Minister Jeremy Browne on a visit to China
Photocall: Minister Jeremy Browne on a visit to China
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