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Breaking | Former top PLA general Guo Boxiong jailed for life over graft

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Guo Boxiong was a vice-chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission between 2002 and 2012. Photo: Kyodo
Jun Maiin BeijingandMinnie Chanin Hong Kong

A military court on Monday handed down a life sentence to former top general Guo Boxiong, making him the most senior PLA figure convicted of corruption since 1949.

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The sentencing came days before the 89th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Liberation Army, which is undergoing a major overhaul steered by President Xi Jinping.

Guo, 74, was a vice-chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission between 2002 and 2012, in charge of daily operations. Xu Caihou, another CMC vice-chairman, died of cancer last year at age 72 while in custody under investigation for graft.

Confirmed: former top Chinese general Guo Boxiong to face corruption charges

A signed commentary in the official PLA Daily issued after the verdict said the inquiries into the activities of Guo and Xu – as well as former security tsar Zhou Yongkang, former Chongqing Communist Party boss Bo Xilai and former presidential aide Ling Jihua – had eliminated “major threats” to the party and the military.

But Guo’s case differed from the other disgraced officials in that he faced only a single charge of ­accepting bribes, according to Xinhua.

Then-president Hu Jintao shakes hands with Xu Caihou (right) as Guo Boxiong looks in Beijing in 2005. Photo: China News Service
Then-president Hu Jintao shakes hands with Xu Caihou (right) as Guo Boxiong looks in Beijing in 2005. Photo: China News Service
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Xinhua cited an anonymous representative of the court martial as saying Guo had taken advantage of his position to help in the promotion and reassignment of others. He accepted “extremely huge amounts” of bribes, both personally and in collusion with others, the official said. But the exact amount he took was not specified. The South China Morning Post reported in April that prosecutors charged him with taking 80 million yuan (HK$96 million) in bribes.

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