USA TODAY International Edition

Sensationa­l trial of China politician Bo Xilai ends

He apologizes for not controllin­g family, retracts confession

- Calum MacLeod USA TODAY

BEIJING The trial of high- flying but divisive Chinese politician Bo Xilai, whose career fell apart after his wife murdered a foreign businessma­n, ended Monday after five days of shockingly frank testimony that exposed an elite lifestyle and the troubled family life of a senior member of China’s ruling Communist Party.

The court, convened in Jinan in eastern China, did not set a date for delivering its verdict.

In the final morning of the trial, Bo, 64, retracted a confession and blamed his police chief’s U. S. defection on the chief’s attraction to the politician’s wife, Gu Kailai.

Wang Lijun, Bo’s closest associate and the police chief of Chongqing city, where Bo led the Communist Party, “invaded my family. He invaded my basic emotions. This is the real reason he defected,” Bo said.

Wang “was secretly in love with Gu Kailai. His emotions were entangled. He couldn’t extricate himself,” Bo said. Bo told the court he interrupte­d the pair in close conversati­on and seized Wang’s private letters to Gu.

The pair “were like glue and lacquer,” Bo said, invoking a Chinese idiom used to describe lovers.

Bo, famous for cracking down on organized crime, apologized Monday for not controllin­g his own family and subordinat­es. “I deeply feel I failed to run my household in a proper way, which had a bad influence on the country,” Bo said.

Prosecutor­s had detailed a jet- setting lifestyle and expensive gifts, including a Segway, given to Bo’s son, Bo Guagua, 25, a student in the USA.

Bo dismissed accusation­s of corruption and a lavish lifestyle, insisting that he still wore the rough cotton winter underwear that his mother gave him in the 1960s. He said he had no knowledge of how his son paid for his lifestyle.

Bo retracted a confession he said he gave “because at the time, I had hope burning in my heart I could keep my party membership and retain my political life.”

Prosecutor­s said in their final argument that the evidence proves Bo committed bribery, embezzleme­nt and abuse of power. They argued for severe punishment because Bo had refused to admit guilt, according to the official microblogg­ed account of proceeding­s, which may be censored by government authoritie­s.

Authoritie­s routinely censor the media, block access to many websites and curtail any group activity they fear may spread unorthodox ideas or threaten “social stability.”

China analysts say a guilty verdict remains certain, as the Communist Party that rules China would have not brought Bo before the courts it controls unless the outcome was preordaine­d. Bo, a former Politburo member and son of a revolution­ary elder, could face a suspended death sentence, which usually means life imprisonme­nt. The party rarely enforces capital punishment of senior figures.

“Before the trial, I expected a 15to 20- year sentence, but it’s now harder to predict after such an open trial for a case with such a heavy po- litical tone,” said He Weifang, a legal expert at Peking University. “The trial has been controlled but has been quite just in its procedures, which has surprised many.”

China’s previous leader, Hu Jintao, removed Bo from power, and current Communist Party boss Xi Jinping is using the trial to demonstrat­e the government’s crackdown on corruption, said Russell Moses, a Chinese politics expert in Beijing. The trial has focused on the bribes and gifts allegedly received by Bo and his family, but it has political implicatio­ns as well, Moses said. Bo’s rise in recent years threatened to disrupt Xi’s 2012 leadership transition, Moses said.

“The trial is very much the capstone to a political takedown of an alternativ­e way of conceiving what the party should do and how it should do it,” Moses said. Bo “was a major threat because he had both a style and a political strategy that appealed to a public that was looking for something more than the same old slogans.”

 ?? CCTV VIA AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Ousted Chinese politician Bo Xilai is accused of corruption.
CCTV VIA AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Ousted Chinese politician Bo Xilai is accused of corruption.

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