China’s Bo Xilai to stand trial this week

Case is seen as key early test of new president Xi Jinping’s campaign against corruption

File photograph from 2010 of China’s former Chongqing Municipality Communist Party secretary Bo Xilai, who is due in court on Thursday. Photograph: Jason Lee/Reuters
File photograph from 2010 of China’s former Chongqing Municipality Communist Party secretary Bo Xilai, who is due in court on Thursday. Photograph: Jason Lee/Reuters

The trial of disgraced senior Chinese politician Bo Xilai will start on Thursday when he will face charges of bribery, corruption and abuse of power, Xinhua state news agency said.

The trial of Mr Bo (64), a “princeling” son of a late vice premier who is still popular with conservatives and the disaffected, is the country’s most divisive since the 1976 downfall of Mao Zedong’s widow, Jiang Qing, and her Gang of Four at the end of the Cultural Revolution. It will be a key early test of new president Xi Jinping’s campaign against corruption.

Mr Bo's wife, Gu Kailai, and his estranged police chief, Wang Lijun, have both been jailed over the scandal stemming from the November 2011 murder of British businessman Neil Heywood in the southwestern city of Chongqing, where Mr Bo was Communist Party chief.

The trial will open at the Intermediate People’s Court in Jinan, capital of the coastal province of Shandong, on Thursday, Xinhua said in a terse report today. It gave no further details.

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It is almost certain Mr Bo will be convicted as China’s prosecutors and judges are controlled by the ruling Communist Party.

How the case is handled will be a test of the effectiveness of Mr Xi’s battle against corruption and also show how he has been able to stamp his authority on the party, which he leads.

Mr Xi has vowed to fight both “tigers” and “flies” - in other words people at every level of the party - as he combats a pervasive culture of corruption that is serious he has warned it threatens the party’s very survival. However, his campaign has so far netted precious few “tigers”, and in any case the Bo scandal pre-dates his s time as national leader.

Mr Bo, a former commerce minister, used his post as party boss of Chongqing to cast the sprawling, haze-covered municipality into a showcase for his mix of populist policies and bold spending plans that won support from leftists yearning for a charismatic leader.

His former police chief had spearheaded a controversial drive against organised crime, a prominent plank in Mr Bo’s barely concealed campaign to join the top ranks of the party.

Reuters