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Former Chinese President’s aide Ling Jihua under investigation

The announcement is seen as a sign that President Xi Jinping is removing his predecessor’s influences

Agency
Monday 22 December 2014 14:16 EST
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Ling Jihua has been placed under investigation for unspecified disciplinary violations
Ling Jihua has been placed under investigation for unspecified disciplinary violations (Reuters)

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Ling Jihua, the top aide to the former President Hu Jintao, has been placed under investigation for unspecified disciplinary violations, the official Xinhua News Agency said today.

The announcement is seen as a sign that President Xi Jinping is removing his predecessor’s influences. The aide was demoted in 2012 following reports that his son had died after crashing his Ferrari in Beijing.

The announcement came two years after Ling Jihua fell out of political favour when a lurid scandal involving his alleged cover-up of his son's death in a speeding Ferrari disrupted his political ascent.

But Mr Ling returned to the public eye this year when his two brothers came under investigation, triggering speculation that he too would be implicated under President Xi Jinping's widening anti-corruption campaign. The campaign is seen by many as a means to not only restore public confidence in the ruling Communist Party, but also to root out threats to Mr Xi's political dominance.

Already, Mr Xi has removed Bo Xilai, a former Politburo member, and Zhou Yongkang, a former member of the Politburo's powerful Standing Committee.

Mr Ling had served as head of the party's general office, which gave him influence over key personnel arrangements.

He became a household name in 2012 when his son crashed a Ferrari in Beijing during what might have been sex games with two nude or half-dressed women, reports by Hong Kong media said months later, and Ling Jihua was accused of covering up the scandal.

In the lead-up to a generational handover in power in 2012, Mr Ling had appeared destined for a seat in the party's Politburo, a council of top leaders, but was instead removed from the top leadership when he was named the head of the United Front Work Department.

PA

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