Son of sacked official fights back

Reuters, file

Bo Guagua, left, with his father Bo Xilai in 2007.

By Bo Gu
NBC News

BEIJING – Bo Guagua, son of the now disgraced former Chinese Communist leader Bo Xilai, has come into the spotlight again in the wake of the political scandal rocking his family.

On Tuesday he issued a statement to the website of Harvard’s newspaper, The Harvard Crimson, denying allegations that his expensive tuitions at exclusive schools were provided by Xu Ming, one of the wealthiest businessman in China who has since disappeared.

“My tuition and living expenses at Harrow School, University of Oxford and Harvard University were funded exclusively by two sources – scholarships earned independently, and my mother’s generosity from the savings she earned from her years as a successful lawyer and writer,” Bo said in the statement.

It’s not a rare thing in China for children of high ranking officials (called “princelings” here) to benefit from their powerful fathers by acquiring internal business information and monopolies in certain important sectors. Most of them have degrees from schools in Western countries and engage in highly profitable industries. But very few of them are as high profile as Bo Guagua, something he might be regretting in the past few weeks, when worldwide press tried everything possible to approach anyone who knows what’s happening to him and his family amongst China’s biggest political scandal in decades.

In the statement, Bo Guagua also disputed allegations that he had lived a luxury life while failing academically from Oxford to Harvard.

“My examination records have been solid throughout my schooling years. In the British public examination of GCSEs, which I completed at the age of 16, I achieved 11 ‘A Stars,’ …I also earned straight A’s for both AS level and A-level Examinations at the ages of 17 and 18, respectively,” he said.  

A son with star power

Bo Guagua has always been a favorite son of the Chinese media and many young people in China, even long before the fall of his family.

People loved calling his first name, Guagua (which means “melon-melon” in Chinese) in a half-joking and half-despising way. People talked about him as if he was a Hollywood star, but also with anger and jealousy.

His father, Bo Xilai, was the handsome boss of China’s biggest municipal city, hero of cracking down gangs and a hot contender to be part of the next Politburo standing committee, the country’s top power echelon.

His mother, Gu Kailai, daughter of one of the country’s founding generals, a charming and successful lawyer, published a book about her winning a case representing a Chinese company in the U.S., which was later made into a TV series called “Winning a lawsuit in the U.S.” It featured some of the most renowned actors in China.

Born in 1987, Bo Guagua is polite, good looking, and somewhat mysterious. He attended schools most Chinese boys at his age would only dream of: Harrow, one of Britain’s most prestigious all-boys boarding schools, Oxford, and Harvard. He was interviewed by Lu Yu from Phoenix TV, in one of the most popular talk show programs in China. He gave a speech at Peking University, the country’s most prestigious university. He won a “Big Ben Award” by British Chinese Youth Federation at the age of 22. He dated Chen Xiaodan, the glamorous granddaughter of China’s former vice premier.

Stories of him driving a red Ferrari to pick up former U.S. ambassador Jon Huntsman’s daughter for a date spread like wildfire online. His pictures of partying at Oxford and Harvard were re-posted tens of thousands of times, one shows a red-faced smiling Guagua with his arms around two girls.

In response to the party pictures that were criticized as evidence of his lavish lifestyle abroad, he said in his statement: “During my time at Oxford, it is true that I participated in ‘Bops,’ a type of common Oxford social event, many of which are themed. These events are a regular feature of social life at Oxford and most students take part in these college-wide activities.”

He said the idea that he was cruising around in a red Ferrari was absurd and a false accusation; his father also said the story was false in his last public appearance. “I have never driven a Ferrari. I have also not been to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing since 1998 (when I obtained a previous U.S. Visa), nor have I ever been to the U.S. Ambassador’s residence in China.”

But missing in the statement was any mention of Neil Heywood, the British businessman who was murdered last November in Chongqing. Heywood was said to have been a close family friend who helped him get into Harrow. Bo’s mother is currently being investigated as a prime suspect in his murder.

James Murdoch: Subordinates’ ‘assurances’ on phone hacking ‘proved to be wrong’

James Murdoch was back at the Leveson inquiry, where he claimed he didn’t know about phone-hacking at News Corp’s U.K. unit,  and didn’t remember being told about it. ITV’s Juliet Bremner reports.

By msnbc.com news services

LONDON – James Murdoch defended his record at the head of his father’s scandal-tarred British newspaper unit before a U.K. inquiry Tuesday, saying that subordinates prevented him from making a clean sweep at the now-defunct News of the World tabloid. 

Speaking under oath at Lord Justice Brian Leveson’s inquiry into media ethics, Murdoch repeated allegations that the tabloid’s then-editor Colin Myler and the company’s former in-house lawyer Tom Crone misled him about the scale of illegal behavior at the newspaper. 

Leveson asked Murdoch: “Can you think of a reason why Mr. Myler or Mr. Crone should keep this information from you? Was your relationship with them such that they may think: ‘Well we needn’t bother him with that’ or ‘We better keep it from it because he’ll ask to cut out the cancer’?” 


“That must be it,” Murdoch said. “I would say: ‘Cut out the cancer,’ and there was some desire to not do that.” 

The 39-year-old Murdoch said that at the time he had no reason to doubt his subordinates when he took over at News International, which published the News of the World, saying he had repeatedly been told that nothing was amiss. 

“I was given assurances by them, which proved to be wrong,” he said. 

Revelations that reporters at the News of the World had hacked into the phones of hundreds of high-profile people, including a teenage murder victim, pushed Murdoch’s father Rupert to close the 168-year-old newspaper, triggered three U.K. police investigations, led to more than 100 lawsuits, and launched Leveson’s inquiry into media practices. 

James Murdoch has found himself sucked into the center of scandal, with critics saying that he should have found out about the wrongdoing once he took over at News International in December 2007. 

Ben Stansall / AFP – Getty Images

A protestor wearing a mask depicting James Murdoch demonstrates outside London’s High Court during his testimony.

The uproar over illegal behavior at the News of the World has already scuttled Murdoch’s multi-billion dollar bid for full control of satellite broadcaster British Sky Broadcasting Group PLC. He resigned from his post as chairman earlier this month “to avoid being a lightning rod,” he said. 

Murdoch’s relationship with politicians also came under scrutiny. 

The American-born News Corp. executive revealed that he’d told Conservative leader David Cameron that The Sun newspaper would endorse the Tories’ election bid at a meeting at the George club in London on Sept. 10, 2009. 

The top-selling paper’s endorsement was a blow to Britain’s Labour Party — and critics claim that it helped secure Tory approval for the potentially lucrative BSkyB bid after they won the election in 2010. 

Murdoch denied the charge Tuesday. 

“I would never have made that kind of a crass calculation,” Murdoch said. “It just wouldn’t occur to me.” 

Murdoch acknowledged talking to Cameron about it at a Christmas dinner in 2010 — after the Tory leader had been elected prime minister — but said it was “a tiny side conversation ahead of a dinner.” 

Judge slams Murdoch’s Sky News for illegal email hacking

“It wasn’t really a discussion, if you will,” Murdoch said. 

Cameron, who won power two years ago, has been forced to play down his contacts with the Murdochs and with Rebecca Brooks, a neighbor and frequent guest at his home in the countryside.

Rupert Murdoch, who is still chairman and chief executive of News International’s parent company News Corp., is scheduled to appear before the inquiry on Wednesday. 

U.S.-based News Corp, owner of Fox Television and the Wall Street Journal, was thwarted in its ambition last year to buy the 61 percent of BSkyB, a major British pay-TV provider, that it did not already own. Amid the fire storm of scandal at the News of the World, it withdrew the bid.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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South Sudanese run for cover as Sudan bombs border area

Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

A soldier in South Sudan’s SPLA army looks up at warplanes as he lies on the ground to take cover beside a road during an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona, near Bentiu, South Sudan, on April 23, 2012.

Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

A woman runs along a road during an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona on April 23, 2012.

 

Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

Smoke rises after the Sudanese air force fired a missile during an air strike in Rubkona on April 23, 2012.

Reuters reports — Sudanese warplanes carried out air strikes on South Sudan on Monday, killing three people near a southern oil town, residents and military officials said, three days after South Sudan pulled out of a disputed oil field.

A Reuters reporter at the scene, outside the oil town of Bentiu, said he saw a fighter aircraft drop two bombs near a river bridge between Bentiu and the neighboring town of Rubkona. 

Sudan leader says he will teach independent South a ‘final lesson by force’

Weeks of border fighting between the two neighbors have brought the former civil war foes closer to a full-blown war than at any time since the South seceded in July. Read more.

Video: George Clooney calls crisis in Sudan ‘real disaster’

Goran Tomasevic / Reuters

A soldier in South Sudan’s SPLA army walks in a market destroyed in an air strike by the Sudanese air force in Rubkona on April 23, 2012.

Michael Onyiego / AP

A South Sudanese soldier has a bullet removed from his leg in the Rubkona Military Hospital on April 22, 2012.

 

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