Ex-Chinese security chief probed: report

Ex-Chinese security chief probed: report

China's Communist chief Xi Jinping has given the go-ahead for a corruption investigation into the former head of the country's internal security apparatus, the New York Times reported Monday.

A paramilitary guard stands on Tiananmen Square before a portrait of chairman Mao Zedong during the unveiling ceremony of a new Politburo Standing Committee, in Beijing on November 15, 2012

Citing what it described as "sources with elite political ties", the paper said the decision to open the inquiry into Zhou Yongkang was made early this month.

Zhou is a former member of the elite Politburo Standing Committee and one of China's most powerful politicians of the last decade.

It would be the first time for decades that such a high-ranking figure has been targeted in a formal inquiry.

A senior official visited Zhou at his home to inform him of the move and he and his wife have since been under what the paper described as "constant guard", without saying he had been detained.

The New York Times cited five people including "a lawyer with family connections to the party elite" and "the granddaughter of a late leader".

All spoke in return for anonymity due to "the risk of recriminations for discussing sensitive politics", the paper said.

"It’s not like in the past few months, when he was being secretly investigated and more softly restricted," the paper quoted the lawyer as saying. "Now it’s official."

Xi has taken a hard line against graft in the party since coming to power a little over one year ago. He took over as state president in March this year, the culmination of a once-in-a-decade leadership transition.

He has warned that corruption could destroy the party and threatened to stamp down on high-ranking officials, or "tigers", along with low-level "flies".

The ruling party maintains its own internal disciplinary body, which may or may not pass cases to the criminal justice system.

But there is no assurance that the Zhou inquiry's existence would ever be officially confirmed, or its findings announced.

Nonetheless a move against Zhou -- who was linked to fallen political star Bo Xilai -- would send shockwaves through China's elite.

The reported decision by Xi and other leaders to launch the probe follows a series of inquiries into suspected abuse of power and corruption among officials and oil company executives with ties to Zhou.

The highest-ranking official to be snared by Xi's crackdown is Jiang Jiemin, a former chief of state-owned China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) -- which Zhou himself headed from 1996 to 1998.

Jiang was sacked as head of the body overseeing state-owned companies in September, the official Xinhua news agency reported, over "suspected serious disciplinary violations" -- a euphemism often used for graft.

He has links with Zhou going back to the 1980s, when they worked together at a CNPC oilfield in Shandong province.

China also announced in August that four top managers at CNPC and its listed arm PetroChina were under investigation on similar accusations.

Zhou was the party chief of the southwestern province of Sichuan from 1999 to 2002, and in June Xinhua said its former vice governor Guo Yongxiang had been put under investigation.

Guo also worked in the oil industry for 26 years, according to Chinese media reports.

Last December Xinhua said that Li Chuncheng, who was promoted to mayor of the Sichuan capital Chengdu during Zhou's time in the province, had been removed from his post as the province's deputy party secretary for "serious violations of discipline".

Li was the first high-ranking official to be fired after the Communist power handover.

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