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The Chinese leader has entrusted several members of the CCP’s new security faction with the challenging task of ensuring the anti-corruption campaign is strictly implemented, especially within those state structures over which Xi Jinping believes he does not yet have full control.
The company spearheading China’s cyber ambitions is facing a long and complicated lawsuit brought before a New York court by its former investors, forcing it to keep one foot in the United States.
Li Keqiang’s retirement in favour of new premier Li Qiang signal the end of the once powerful faction close to China’s business community and its advisers. The movement has been gradually silenced to allow another league close to the president to emerge.
The Chinese investment bank has quietly started reshuffling its teams in an effort to soften the blow it could be dealt by an investigation the Chinese Communist Party’s Central Committee for Discipline Inspection may launch against it.
The eponymous consultancy headed by Hong Kong’s former chief executive is working to rebuild China’s business ties with overseas partners. It has been drawing on Leung’s networks in the former British territory.
From anti-corruption campaigns to the Central Military Commission, more and more strategic Chinese Communist Party positions are being filled by members who hail from or forged their political career in the president’s home province of Shaanxi.
Following its second plenary session last week, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection is now set to report back to Xi Jinping to explain the strategies it has chosen to deal with the campaign’s priority targets – finance and property.
Chinese influence is growing in Cambodia, thanks in no small part to Prince Holding Group, headed by its mysterious founder-president, 35-year-old Chen Zhi.
All new members of the Chinese Communist Party’s politburo and discipline inspection committee appointed during the party’s October congress were subjected to unprecedented scrutiny by Xi Jinping’s closest collaborators. As a result, some factions saw their influence wiped out completely.
Zhejiang provincial leader Chen Yixin, whose rhetorical talents have been acclaimed for more than 20 years, has finally become head of the Ministry of State Security. One of his mains tasks will be to eliminate corruption – and any sign of opposition – in the police, the army and the intelligence services.
The work of a parish, and of a cultural centre, both very close to Taipei’s government, is forcing the Chinese Communist Party to take a close look at Paris’s Chinatown.
The security-focused conclusions of the Chinese Communist Party Congress went beyond the international headline issue of Taiwan. Beijing is already considering diplomatic and intelligence manoeuvres to aid its expansion into other territories.
The Chinese president is set to go Hong Kong to take part in celebrations for the 25th anniversary of the handover of the territory to China with an already established plan for the future of the former British enclave.
While celebrating its 100th anniversary, the Communist Youth League of China, which has gotten in the way of President Xi Jinping’s political ambitions, is being restructured.
A former philosophy student from a family of journalists in Xi’an, Zhao Leji, now a senior civil servant and secretary of the Communist Party’s central committee for discipline inspection, has been given the task of launching China’s latest bureaucratic purge.
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