Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Gang crackdown, lurid mob trials transfix China
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
More Yahoo! Services
Account Options
New User? Sign Up
Sign In
Help
Yahoo! Search
web search
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Australia
China
India
Indonesia
Japan
Malaysia
Philippines
Thailand
Vietnam
Gang crackdown, lurid mob trials transfix China
By HENRY SANDERSON,Associated Press Writer -
Thursday, October 22
Send
IM Story
Print
BEIJING – After she refused a corrupt cop's demand that she turn her teahouse into an illegal casino, three thugs beat Chen Yanling with electric batons, sending her to the hospital for nearly a month.
Chen is now getting some vicarious revenge, joining the throngs outside a courthouse where modern-day China's biggest, most lurid mob trials are under way.
The trials are exposing sordid, deep-seated connections between organized crime and corrupt officials and police in the central mega-city of Chongqing, once known as Chungking. Among the suspects: the 46-year-old sister-in-law of the city's deputy police chief, who is accused of running 20 illegal gambling halls, all protected by the police.
Labeled the godmother of the Chongqing underworld, Xie Caiping's profanity-laced testimony drew a rebuke from the judge last week, but delighted the public, which reveled in tales in the local media that she kept 16 lovers.
Such salacious details and more _ the lowly paid deputy police chief acquired a $4.4 million villa with his ill-gotten gains _ have been given unusually riveting coverage by the state media, which normally shrinks from revelations of corruption that touch the ruling Communist Party.
On Wednesday, six gang members were sentenced to death for crimes including murder and blackmail, the first among hundreds expected to go on trial. Twenty-five others accused of belonging to "mafia-style" organizations were given sentences ranging from one to 18 years in prison.
The proceedings at the city's No. 5 Intermediate People's Court have drawn hundreds each day, among them victims like teahouse owner Chen, who was attacked three years ago and came to watch as handcuffed suspects wearing bright orange vests were escorted to trial.
"Although my case hasn't been solved yet, I already feel better. Many people who know my situation told me 'Chen Yanling, the day you've waited so long for has finally come. You're finally liberated,'" Chen said.
Chongqing's crackdown, which began last summer, has been surprisingly extensive, netting more than 1,544 suspects _ gangsters, prominent businessmen and 14 high-ranking officials. The latter include the second-in-command at the police criminal investigation division and the deputy director of the Higher People's Court, as well as a local legislator and the deputy director of the city's coal safety bureau.
Intended to display the Chinese leadership's renewed resolve to stamp out corruption, the Chongqing campaign has instead highlighted how entrenched criminal gangs have become throughout China.
"Local governments have essentially lost control over organized crime," said Ming Xia, a professor at The City University of New York who studies China's criminal underworld. He said an internal report by the national police ministry estimated that China had 2 million to 3 million people involved in organized crime in 2004 and 4,200 "mafia-style syndicates." He believes the number of participants may be as high as 4 million.
In central Henan province, gangs run beer-supply networks. In southwestern Chengdu, they steal medicine and resell it. In northern Hebei province, nearly 100 gangsters put on trial last month were involved in businesses ranging from entertainment to seafood wholesaling and parking; 10 were sentenced to death.
The pervasiveness marks a remarkable resurgence for gangs, which were almost completely eradicated in the first decades of Communist rule.
"Triad" gangs, which started as secret societies trying to unseat the last imperial dynasty but moved into criminal activities, flourished in pre-communist China. Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek formed a close alliance with triads in Shanghai, and many fled with him when the communists seized power in 1949. Most migrated to Hong Kong to escape a communist crackdown on the opium trade, prostitution and gang activity.
Over the past 30 years, the economic boom caused by free-market reforms forced the Communist Party to withdraw from many areas it formerly controlled, clearing the way for new gangs to emerge and conspire with officials who held bureaucratic power but were poorly paid.
Gangs started out in traditional rackets _ drug trafficking, smuggling luxury cars and extortion _ in the 1980s. As China's economy evolved, they moved on to loan-sharking and evicting tenants from land for real estate development. Tax reform in the mid-1990s sent revenue to Beijing at the expense of local governments, making local officials and police eager to cash in on the money-making opportunities offered by gangs.
The leadership now sees the link between endemic corruption and organized crime _ or "black societies" in Chinese _ as a threat to its very existence, diminishing the party's already-low popularity.
"In reality organized crime is now delegitimizing the mainland Chinese government because it penetrates deep into the society and economy and brings about and perpetuates bureaucratic corruption," said Sonny Lo, a professor of political science at Canada's University of Waterloo.
As a report in the official Xinhua News Agency, put it: "'Black' power is not only expanding to economic sectors, it is also trying to infiltrate into politics, damaging the image of the party and the country."
Chongqing, a hilly city alongside the Yangtze River known for its steamy hot summers, has a long history of banditry and underworld crime. A century ago, the city hosted the secret societies known as "triads." During the ultra-radical Cultural Revolution in the 1960s, armed groups belonging to different communist factions battled it out.
"In Chongqing, we can say there has been a continuity of rebelling groups, the secret societies, as well as the tradition of violence," said Xia of City University.
Over the past decade, Chongqing took off economically when the government separated the city from Sichuan province, making it a province-level municipality and pouring in investment to boost development in less-prosperous inland China.
New gangs thrived, finding a steady stream of recruits among ex-prisoners and the jobless.
Among the gang leaders sentenced to death on Wednesday was Liu Zhongyong, who ran an unlicensed coal mine that twice caved in, killing three miners. Defendants still on trial include Li Qiang, an entrepreneur and delegate to Chongqing's legislature who allegedly hired gangsters to infiltrate taxi companies and organize a strike by over 8,000 taxi drivers last November.
And of course there was Xie, the gambling hall owner. She once absconded with a suitcase full of money after being tipped off by her brother-in-law, deputy head of police Wen Qiang, before a police raid on one of her premises, according to the Southern Weekend newspaper. Last year, gang members she hired beat an undercover police officer unconscious, put him in a bag and dumped him in the countryside.
Gangsters are often hired as muscle to settle disputes. Huang Guobi, a farmer, said her husband was killed when seven gang members broke into their house and attacked him to settle a land dispute. Her husband was stabbed more than 20 times; she suffered 10 stab wounds, she said.
"We were screaming for help, but nobody came," Huang said. "I passed out and regained consciousness after I was sent to the hospital. All villagers know those people are gangsters. They gamble, steal or rob all the time."
___
Associated Press researcher Xi Yue in Beijing contributed to this report.
Recommend
Send
IM Story
Print
Related Articles
Large parts of North Korea hit by forest fires - NASA Reuters - 2 hours 59 minutes ago
Pakistani brigadier, driver killed shooting Reuters - Thursday, October 22
Taiwan school pupils 'made to eat fire': TV report AFP - Thursday, October 22
Gates pledges nuclear umbrella to counter N. Korea Reuters - Thursday, October 22
Multiple fires rage in NKorea, satellite images show AFP - Thursday, October 22
News Search
Top Stories
Galleon funds to close amid insider trading scandal
'Sahrawi Gandhi' awarded New York peace prize
Tropical storm Rick threatens flash floods in Mexico
Wells Fargo profit jumps to record $3.2 bln
Deutsche Bank posts three-fold rise in quarterly profit
More Top Stories »
ADVERTISEMENT
Most Popular
Most Viewed
Most Recommended
Data confirms 'modest' AIDS vaccine breakthrough
Australian burglar betrayed by leech
British airport operator sells London airport
Rights group in hot water over Israel criticism
Balloon boy parents ready to surrender to police: lawyer
More Most Viewed »
Boyzone singer Gately dies in Spain
More Most Recommended »
Elsewhere on Yahoo!
Financial news on Yahoo! Finance
Stars and latest movies
Best travel destinations
More on Yahoo! News
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Subscribe to our news feeds
Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS
» More news feeds | What are news feeds?
Also on Yahoo
Answers
Groups
Mail
Messenger
Mobile
Travel
Finance
Movies
Sports
Games
» All Yahoo! Services
Site Highlights
Singapore
Full Coverage
Most Popular
Asia Entertainment
Photos
Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Service |
Privacy Policy |
Community |
Intellectual Property Rights Policy |
Help
Other News on Thursday, 22 October 2009 Israelis say deal near with U.S. on Mideast talks
Deutsche Bank posts three-fold rise in quarterly profit
Tropical storm Rick threatens flash floods in Mexico
Vatican move to welcome Anglicans splits critics
Swiss Authorities Admit To Tipping Off U.S. About Roman Polanski
South Sudan finds no sign of feared Ebola outbreak
Wells Fargo profit jumps to record $3.2 bln
Six hostages freed in Paris siege
Six hostages freed in Paris supermarket siege
Appeals Court Rules Judge Wrongly Imprisoned Soap Star Brenda Dickson
Second Afghan vote 'will not be perfect': UN envoy
Iran makes bomb arrests, Pakistan vows help
Burberry Suing Pet Accessories Store For Copyright Infringement
"Dr. No" Villain Joseph Wiseman Dies At 91
Industrialised nations' CO2 emissions rose in 2007: UN
Bomb kills journalist, wounds another in Iraq
Rio police kill 7; total of 33 dead in drug war
| International
|
Israeli police arrest convicted American pedophile
Draft agreement on Iran uranium deal: IAEA chief
Asia demand for ivory, sharks' fins set for scrutiny
Iraq's parliament fails to agree on election law
| International
|
Iran, powers get draft deal for approval by Friday
Bomb kills US soldier in Afghanistan: NATO
Hostages held at gunpoint in Canada office building
| International
|
Disaffected Anglican dioceses may switch to Rome: group
| International
|
Bomb hits Bangladesh MP's car, several hurt
| International
|
Microsoft's Bing seals Facebook, Twitter deals
| Technology
|
Google, labels partner on music search: sources
| Technology
|
Pakistan hits Taliban as schools ordered shut
Chinese group says Google violating copyrights
Canada allows Internet throttling as last resort
| Technology
|
Lawyer denies reports Lockerbie bomber dead
Cambodian PM offers to host fugitive Thai ex-PM
Skype working on business sector expansion
| Technology
|
Gore: China, US must cooperate on climate change
Key lawmaker backs FCC on eve of Web rule
| Technology
|
US 'jihadist' charged in anti-American plots
Wikipedia founder in HP online magazine print deal
| Technology
|
AZ Councilman makes remarks insensitive to Jews
US, China to meet next week for trade talks
Cambodia leader: Ousted Thai PM is always welcome
Safety board issues wake-up call on sleep disorder
Fearing fresh attacks, Pakistan shuts schools
Second Afghan vote 'will not be perfect': UN envoy
Pakistan advance into Taliban leader's hometown
U.S. revokes more visas to pressure Honduran solution
Marine pleads guilty in hero hoax, to be sentenced
Woman in W.Va. torture case now says she lied
AP NewsAlert
Even Help From Higher Power Fails To Stop Ministerial Layoffs
Beige Book: Economy Leveling Off, But Still Has Weakness
Microsoft Hopes XP Users Switch To Windows 7
Massachusetts Man Charged With Terrorism, Plotting To Attack Shopping Malls
Suspected Jihadist Arrested For Plotting Mall Attack
Poll: Crist's Conservative Rival Gains Ground In Senate Race
India economy seen growing 6.5 pct this year
Secret CIA Prison In Lithuania To Be Investigated
Longworth House Building Evacuated
US seeks progress in high level trade talks with China
Tankers Collide In Gulf Of Mexico
Colorado Residents Charged With Illegal Interstate Traffic, Sale Of Bobcats, Pelts
India's Tata Motors buys out Spain's Hispano
India court suggests arbitration for feuding Ambanis: report
Electric cars take on hybrids at Tokyo show
China says economic recovery 'consolidated'
China signals economic shift to curb overcapacity
Tokyo car show spurned as foreign firms eye China
China wants to boost trade at Asian summit
New managers vow to resurrect storied HK studio
Veiled Iranian women suspected of drug smuggling
Hollywood film recreates Russia-Georgia war
Horror movie marks MTV's drive into scripted shows
| Entertainment
|
Canadian author named new president of PEN
Sesame Street seeks Gaza access
Japan dolphin hunting town threatens to sue over 'The Cove'
Europe's 'Hot d'Or' porn film awards return
Taiwan group says China trip cancelled over Kadeer film
Migrant workers face abuse in SKorea: Amnesty
100,000 Italian women protest 'offensive' Berlusconi
Families divided as Bhutan refugees start new lives
Lil Wayne appears for DNA hearing in NYC gun case
For sale: Stage where James Dean's career began
No Surprise Here: Simon Cowell's Mother Admits He Was A "Difficult Child"
Colorado Residents Charged With Illegal Interstate Traffic, Sale Of Bobcats, Pelts
Canadian Sex Workers Seek Safer Work Environment
Blue Roses Hit Japan Stores, Sell For Up To $33 Per Stem
Armed Robbery Suspect Used Bra To Disguise Face
Faux Spokesman Hoped To Highlight Organization's "Absurd" Climate Stance
Police Detectives Save Bronx Cat Trapped In Car Engine
Scientists Developing Tools To Give Future 100-Year-Olds A Body 50 Years Younger
Blood Sucking Leeches Lead Police To Criminal
Astronomers Find 32 New Extrasolar Planets
UN details 'devastating' impact of Afghan opium
Berlusconi in Russia on 'private' visit, meets Putin
eBay net profit slides for fourth quarter in a row
Gates says moving ahead on Afghan troop policy
| International
|
Galleon funds to close amid insider trading scandal
'Sahrawi Gandhi' awarded New York peace prize
Pakistani brigadier, driver killed in shooting
| International
|
More Internet users sharing status updates: report
Gates pledges nuclear umbrella to counter North Korea
| International
|
China mulls military rescue of hijacked sailors
| International
|
Iraqi lawmakers deadlocked over election law
Rio police kill 7; total of 33 dead in drug war
| International
|
UN pushes draft Iran nuclear deal
Israelis say deal near with U.S. on Mideast talks
| International
|
Microsoft, Google integrating Twitter into search
Canada gunman surrenders after 10-hour standoff
| International
|
Key U.S. lawmaker backs FCC on eve of Web rule
Honduras regime uses noise attack as U.S. cuts visas
| International
|
Iran arrests suspects in attack on military chiefs
Australia sheik charged over Afghan widow hate mail
| International
|
Canada allows Internet "throttling" as last resort
Iraqi lawmakers stuck over election law
HP partners with university to print digital books
Wikipedia founder in HP online magazine print deal
RIM launches new Bold, but challenge looms for Storm
Skype working on business sector expansion
Microsoft launches Windows 7, eyes PC sales rebound
| Technology
|
Windows 7 may help kickstart delayed corporate spend
| Technology
|
Microsoft, Google seal Twitter search deals
| Technology
|
Like Windows 7, Vista got good reviews too
| Technology
|
Hulu trying out models to boost revenue: NBC
| Technology
|
US committed to defence of SKorea: Gates
Taiwan school pupils 'made to eat fire': TV report
Judge: Notices must be in formats blind can read
Gates pledges nuclear umbrella to counter N. Korea
Key U.S. lawmaker backs FCC on eve of Web rule
| Technology
|
Video makers release tape of Philly ACORN visit
Woman in W.Va. torture case now says she lied
Kan. lawmaker agrees to new 'rap' on YouTube
Multiple fires rage in NKorea, satellite images show
Dems go after antitrust exemption for insurers
US warns of 'slow, painful' talks with Myanmar
Marine gets 18 months confinement for hero hoax
US will never have 'normal' ties with a nuclear NKorea
Housing regs to add protections for gays
Gang crackdown, lurid mob trials transfix China
2nd trial begins in Seattle Jewish center shooting
Navy petty officer to face punishment in hazing
Pohang outgun Umm-Salal, Al Ittihad rout Nagoya
US House demands Vietnam free bloggers
Indonesia's Yudhoyono unveils rainbow cabinet
First Year Enrollment In Medical Schools Up By 2%
Feds Plan To Sharply Cut Pay, Perks For Bailout Firms
Nicole Kidman highlights violence against women
S.Korea fin minister sees property prices stabilising
No plan for foreign bank liquidity controls -S.Korea fin min
Bahamas declares mistrial in John Travolta extortion
| Entertainment
|
Michael Buble still tops on U.S. album chart
| Entertainment
|
US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary
Former KISS drummer: men get breast cancer too
Former KISS drummer: men get breast cancer too
| Entertainment
|
Mockingbird actress Collin Wilcox Paxton dies
| Entertainment
|
"The Big Man" on life with and without Springsteen
Nicole Kidman highlights violence against women
Hulu trying out models to boost revenue: NBC
Disney project aims to play films on any device
List of new Indonesian Cabinet appointees
Hulu trying out models to boost revenue: NBC
| Entertainment
|
R. Kelly sets album date, claims R&B chart record
The Big Man on life with and without Springsteen
| Entertainment
|
R. Kelly sets album date, claims R&B chart record
| Entertainment
|
Indonesian president announces new Cabinet
Michael Buble still tops on U.S. album chart
Validity of DNA test argued in Lil Wayne gun case
Joshua Bell plays for Poland's Jewish Museum
Iran, Israel traded barbs at nuclear talks: delegate
Microsoft launches Windows 7
Security big worry as Afghans gear up for run-off
| International
|
Credit Suisse joins surge in bank profits
Two Koreas held secret talks for summit: report
| International
|
Newspaper, Internet titans duel at Web 2.0 Summit
Afghan MP sees role as king-maker in runoff
US-TECH Summary
Ethiopia appeals for food aid for 6.2 million
| International
|
U.S. sees Israel drill helping Europe missile shield
| International
|
Senior Iranian MP casts doubt on atom fuel deal
| International
|
Dalai Lama to visit disputed Indian state on November 8
| International
|
Smear trial tarnishes French political elite
| International
|
Karadzic boycott throws war trial start into doubt
| International
|
China authors says Google violated copyrights
| Technology
|
Nokia sues Apple for patent infringement
| Technology
|
Cheney: Stop the 'dithering' as troops face danger
One size fits all phone chargers on the way: ITU
| Technology
|
Australian PM sickened by hate mail sent to war widows
Court rejects Calif. plan to cut prison population
FCC staff recommends open Internet rule
| Technology
|
Family row stops NKorea succession talk: researcher
Microsoft befriends Twitter in Google search duel
French fund invests in YouTube rival Dailymotion
| Technology
|
Australia denies 'terrorists' on asylum boats
Navajos may try to buy popular Arizona ski resort
Japan urges US to respect 'democracy' over base
'Balloon boy' parents heard crying in 911 call
Thailand rejects US pressure over 'Merchant of Death'
Mass. man accused of plot to kill shoppers, troops
Malaysian couple arrested for beating maid
Remains found in Utah not poet Everett Ruess
3 Tijuana drug figures plead guilty in US
India's Congress party wins state polls
Insecurity, jobs drive Sri Lanka's boat people
FACTBOX-S.Korea's recent overseas energy investments
Taiwan jobless rate falls from record highs
Taiwan's AU Optronics returns to profit
Japan's trade surplus hits 18-month high
China's economy revs up with 8.9% growth
Toshiba launches portable fuel-cell for mobiles
India's Tata mulls checks on world's cheapest car
Kidman: Hollywood probably contributes to violence
Seoul shares end 1.4 pct lower on LG Elec, banks
Trade ministers to begin talks on Pacific deal
Myanmar allows first mobile phones in remote capital
Drag queen movie challenges Russian attitudes
McCartney to launch Europe tour in Hamburg
Once-tame Baghdad zoo now a roaring success
Kidman: Hollywood probably contributes to violence
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights