Ally of former China security chief investigated for corruption

Anti-graft watchdog says Ji Wenlin suspected of Communist Party discpline breaches

Ji Wenlin, a former aide to retired Chinese security tsar Zhou Yongkang, is being investigated for corruption, the government said. Photograph: Reuters.
Ji Wenlin, a former aide to retired Chinese security tsar Zhou Yongkang, is being investigated for corruption, the government said. Photograph: Reuters.

A former aide to retired Chinese security tsar Zhou Yongkang is being investigated for corruption, the government said, the latest move targeting associates of Mr Zhou, himself the subject of a graft probe.

The ruling Communist Party's anti-corruption watchdog said last night that Ji Wenlin, a vice governor of the southern island province of Hainan, was being investigated for suspected serious breaches of party discipline and the law, the usual euphemism for graft.

The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection gave no other details and it was not possible to reach Ji for comment.

President Xi Jinping has launched a sweeping crackdown on corruption since taking power, warning corruption is a threat to the Communist Party’s very survival.

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Mr Ji worked with Mr Zhou when the latter was land resources minister in the late 1990s. Mr Zhou has been put under virtual house arrest, Reuters reported.

Mr Ji then followed Mr Zhou to Sichuan province and became one of his secretaries when Mr Zhou was provincial party boss, Mr Ji's official resume shows.

The two also worked together in the ministry of public security in the early 2000s. Mr Ji was shifted to Hainan province, better known in China for its pristine beaches and resorts, late in 2010.

Several of Mr Zhou's political allies have been taken into custody and questioned over corruption, including former vice minister of public security Li Dongsheng and Jiang Jiemin, the top regulator of state-owned enterprises for just five months until September.

It was reported last month that investigators had questioned more than a dozen senior officials, including the country’s top prosecutor, about their links to Mr Zhou.

It is unclear if the government will actually put Mr Zhou on trial and risk embarrassing revelations about China’s elite becoming public, undermining confidence in the party.

Mr Zhou was a patron of former high-flying politician Bo Xilai, who was jailed for life in September for corruption and abuse of power in the worst political scandal since the 1976 downfall of the Gang of Four led by the widow of former leader Mao Zedong at the end of the Cultural Revolution.

Mr Zhou retired in 2012. He was last seen at an alumni celebration at the China University of Petroleum on October 1st.

Reuters