To: marcher who wrote (192523 ) 10/8/2022 9:27:34 PM From: TobagoJack 1 RecommendationRecommended By marcher
Respond to of 217549 Re <<sounds like chinese regulatory bodies are really real... >> The program going quite well even if obstructed by Teams NATO / 5-Eyes and and and the usual MSM suspects, or by exercise of rule-of-law on whim by either sides, albeit Team China has been quite persistent, inexorable resulting in the inevitable, per no-safe-haven political-will The overall program en.wikipedia.org Implicated officials en.wikipedia.org Serialisation en.wikipedia.org For the video-minded and biased to balanced views Bad luck for the corrupt that they agreed to a compromise candidate after Jiang's rule :0))))VIDEO Xi doing what Trump tried to do and failedVIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO VIDEO Suspect many in other domains would shy away from China-system, because they are (guilty / not-guilty) I wonder which system sates taxi drivers, farmers, and other good-people, and suchtime.com This Is How Much Money You Can Take in Bribes Before the Chinese Authorities Execute You How much is an errant Chinese official’s life worth? Three million renminbi, or $463,000, according to a statement released on April 18 by Chinese judicial authorities. The legal clarification makes the death penalty applicable to anyone who either embezzles, or accepts bribes of, that sum or more. But in certain “especially serious” instances “with extremely vile impact,” like when officials embezzle disaster-relief funds, stealing half that can be grounds for death by firing squad. Previously, the threshold for capital punishment was making away with “a huge amount of money” or “an extremely huge amount of money” — hardly the most precise of measurements. The new criteria, however, specify that “mitigating factors,” which might include cooperating with authorities, can lead to a two-year suspended death sentence and an escape of execution. Under the leadership of Xi Jinping, the ruling Chinese Communist Party has launched an anticorruption campaign that has netted hundreds of thousands of officials. Last year, 16 senior Chinese leaders were convicted of bribery, including the nation’s former security czar Zhou Yongkang. But Zhou, who was accused of running the nation’s vast security apparatus as a personal fiefdom — and before that the nation’s oil industry and the populous province of Sichuan — was not sentenced to death for amassing more than $20 million in bribes, along with his family members. Instead, he was handed a life sentence last June. In 2013, Railways Minister Liu Zhijun earned a suspended death sentence for accepting the equivalent of more than $9.6 million in kickbacks. China executes more people per year than any other nation, although Beijing says the number has dropped in recent years. There are 46 crimes in China that can earn defendants the death penalty. Last year, China dropped certain crimes from its capital-punishment list, including counterfeiting money, weapons smuggling and fabricating rumors to mislead others during wartime.