Bo xilai where is he




















As long as the arrangements are approved 'upstairs' the prison will oblige. Even disgraced, Bo is still part of the party's 'family' because of his father. Qincheng's ordinary prisoners did not find their accommodations very comfortable.

Tiananmen Square demonstration organiser Wang Dan stayed in Qincheng for 19 months starting in In his memoirs, he described the prison's atmosphere as "scary and depressing".

Without any meat and no oil in the vegetables, the buns were not filling or nourishing. I craved bigger portions. Even though the guards took pains to prevent Wang from interacting or even spotting other Tiananmen student leaders, he had brief interactions with them. In the end, I simply treated Qincheng as a university, where I learned my lessons in life.

With my friends living in 'dorms' nearby, the scary and depressing prison became more habitable. Bo is more likely to face enemies than friends in prison. According to Hong Kong media reports, Bo's former right-hand man, Wang Lijun, is serving his sentence in Qincheng prison. At least Bo probably would not have any awkward run-ins with his wife in Qincheng. Gu Kailai was convicted of the murder of British businessman, Neil Heywood, last year. She is thought to be serving her sentence in Hebei province's Yancheng facility, described by China's Ministry of Justice as a "garden-style prison".

The sources said they did not know if Bo had contemplated fleeing China. They also did not say how or why Zhou tipped off Bo, who could have already been under surveillance. Bo disappeared from public view around the same time he was sacked from his senior party positions. Li Guifang, a lawyer who represented Bo during his trial, declined to comment when reached by Reuters and asked about the connection between the two men.

She was given a suspended death sentence in Wang said at his trial that he fell out with Bo over what to do about the murder. Wang was jailed for trying to cover up the killing, for defection, abuse of power and bribe-taking. Five years after former Communist Party bigwig Bo Xilai saw his ambitions for high office spectacularly quashed by scandal, party inspectors say his "pernicious influence" lingers in the Chinese megacity he once governed. Their verdict doesn't don't bode well for a Bo successor whose own chances for promotion into China's top leadership depended in large part on how he overcomes Mr.

Bo's legacy in Chongqing--a time marked by a Maoist revival and heavy state spending, and bookended by dramatic revelations of corruption and murder. You may change your billing preferences at any time in the Customer Center or call Customer Service.

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