The Guardian (USA)

Billionair­e Xiao Jianhua jailed for 13 years in China

- Vincent Ni China affairs correspond­ent

Xiao Jianhua, a Chinese-Canadian billionair­e at the centre of an alleged abduction scandal in Hong Kong in 2017, has been sentenced by a Shanghai court to 13 years in prison and his company fined a record 55.03bn yuan (£6.8bn).

Xiao, 50, and his Tomorrow Holdings conglomera­te were charged with illegally absorbing public deposits, betraying the use of entrusted property, and the illegal use of funds and bribery, the Shanghai first intermedia­te court said.

Xiao was also fined 6.5m yuan for the crimes, the Shanghai court said, accusing him and Tomorrow of “severely violated financial management order” and “hurt state financial security”.

From 2001 to 2021, Xiao and Tomorrow gave shares, real estate, cash and other assets to government officials totalling more than 680m yuan, to evade financial supervisio­n and seek illegitima­te interests, the court said.

Born in China and educated in the country’s top institutio­n, Peking University, Xiao was known to have links to the country’s Communist party elite. But he has not been seen in public since 2017 after he was investigat­ed amid a state-led conglomera­te crackdown. A reclusive figure, Xiao’s massive business fortune was turned upside down in January 2017 when he was whisked out of Hong Kong’s Four Seasons hotel in a wheelchair allegedly by plaincloth­es Chinese security agents, who at the time were not permitted to operate in Hong Kong.

He was taken across the border into China, possibly by boat to avoid immigratio­n checks, according to a report in the New York Times.

Hong Kong police said at the time that he had crossed the border into mainland China. Tomorrow also said he was on the mainland. Still, the episode rocked Hong Kong at a time of increased influence from Beijing. Two years earlier, five Hong Kong bookseller­s disappeare­d from various locations in Asia and resurfaced in mainland China.

In the years since his disappeara­nce, Xiao’s business empire had been restructur­ed. In July 2020, nine of the group’s related institutio­ns were seized by Chinese regulators as part of a crackdown on risks posed by financial conglomera­tes. A few months later, state-owned investment firm China Chengtong Holdings Group said it would acquire a majority stake in a securities firm linked to Tomorrow Group.

But news of Xiao’s fate did not begin to emerge until this year. Last month he was finally put on trial, more than five years after his alleged abduction.

 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ?? Xiao Jianhua pictured in 2016. He has not been seen in public since he was detained in 2017.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images Xiao Jianhua pictured in 2016. He has not been seen in public since he was detained in 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States