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China's former deputy intelligence chief has been sentenced to life in prison for corruption.
Key points:
- Mr Ma was found guilty of accepting bribes and insider trading
- He was also ruled to have used his political power to aid the operations of US-based businessman Guo Wengui
- Chinese President Xi Jinping has been waging an anti-corruption campaign since 2012
Ma Jian was found guilty of crimes including accepting bribes and insider trading, according to a court in the north-eastern port city of Dalian.
Mr Ma, who previously was the vice minister of the state security bureau, was also ordered to pay more than 50 million yuan ($10.35 million) in penalties.
The court said in a statement that Mr Ma used his political power to aid the business operations of Guo Wengui, a real estate billionaire wanted by Chinese authorities.
New York-based Mr Guo has published a series of online videos in which he makes sensational allegations of corruption in the upper echelons of China's ruling Communist Party.
Mr Guo gained control of a national securities company after Mr Ma sent letters addressed from the state security bureau to threaten and pressure individuals to hand over their shares to Mr Guo.
Photo:
Guo Wengui has used social media to lob corruption allegations at some of China's most senior leaders. (Reuters: Carlo Allegri)
Separately, Mr Ma also obtained insider information about the same company whose shares his relatives later purchased, resulting in profits of more than 49 million yuan ($10.14 million).
Mr Ma is the latest top official to be ensnared in Chinese President Xi Jinping's banner anti-corruption campaign, which he launched shortly after taking power in 2012.
Mr Xi pledged to take down both high-level "tigers" and low-level "flies" in a drive to purge the ruling Communist Party of rampant corruption.
The initiative has won Mr Xi broad popularity among the general public, but his critics — Mr Guo included — have called the crackdown a convenient way to eliminate political enemies.
AP
Topics: corruption, economic-trends, communism, china, asia









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