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Ex-China Energy Official Sentenced to 20 Years for Corruption


FILE - A billboard shows Chinese President Xi Jinping with the slogan "To exactly solve the problem of corruption, we must hit both flies and tigers" in Gujiao in northern China's Shanxi province.
FILE - A billboard shows Chinese President Xi Jinping with the slogan "To exactly solve the problem of corruption, we must hit both flies and tigers" in Gujiao in northern China's Shanxi province.

A court in central China on Tuesday jailed a former senior Chinese energy executive for 20 years on corruption charges, the latest official to fall in a sweeping anti-graft campaign linked to allies of disgraced security chief Zhou Yongkang.

President Xi Jinping has warned that rampant corruption threatens the survival of the ruling Communist Party and has waged a war on graft in the past three years that has felled scores of top officials in the party, the government, the military and state-owned companies.

Wang Yongchun was a deputy general manager at China's biggest oil company, China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), until he became caught up in a graft probe last year.

Corruption investigation

CNPC, the parent of PetroChina, was a power base for domestic security czar Zhou Yongkang, who was jailed for life for corruption in June.

Wang went on trial in July on charges of "holding a huge amount of property with unidentified sources" and "abuse of power by a staff member of a state-owned company."

"The property of defendant Wang Yongchun and his family obviously exceeded legal income, and the source of $6.7 million in assets could not be explained," the Xiangyang city Intermediate Court in Hubei province said in a statement.

Several senior CNPC executives have already been put under investigation in the far-reaching graft crackdown, among them former chairman Jiang Jiemin, who on Monday was sentenced to 16 years in prison for bribery and abuse of power.

The court said under the direction of Jiang, Wang had assisted in operations that led to "extremely large losses" to state interests.

Most senior official

Zhou, 72, is the most senior Chinese official to be ensnared in a graft scandal since the Communist Party swept to power in 1949, and many of his former colleagues or political allies have been caught up in the campaign.

A court in the northeastern city of Tianjin opened the trial of another Zhou associate on Tuesday, former vice governor of the southern province of Hainan, Ji Wenlin, the official Xinhua news agency said.

Ji, whose criminal probe began as early as 2014, illicitly received more than $3.2 million in assets and bribes between 2002 and 2013, Xinhua said.

According to his official biography, Ji had worked under Zhou when the latter was the party boss of Sichuan province and the public security minister.

Another Zhou aide from Sichuan, Guo Yongxiang, was sentenced to 20 years in prison on Tuesday in a separate Hubei court for bribery and other crimes.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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