Monday, August 13, 2012
Bo's wife blames breakdown for Briton's murder
The wife of Chinese politician Bo Xilai, whose downfall rocked the ruling elite, has admitted murdering a British businessman and blamed her actions on a mental breakdown, state media said. 						 Gu Kailai told her trial that she poisoned Neil Heywood after being pushed over the edge by fears that her son was in danger, Xinhua news agency reported late on Friday, more than a day after the trial wrapped up. The former top lawyer said she  would "accept and calmly face any sentence" handed down by the court in  the eastern city of Hefei following the seven-hour trial, one of the  most high-profile in recent Chinese history. The verdict will be delivered at a later date, possibly days or weeks away, and while murder carries the death penalty in China, experts say Gu is likely to be spared execution and will instead face a long jail term. Heywood's murder and allegations  of a cover-up sparked the biggest political scandal in China for years  and led to the downfall of Bo, who had been tipped to become one of the  ruling Communist Party's top leaders. It exposed deep divisions among  China's rulers ahead of a sensitive 10-yearly handover of power later  this year, and observers say the party is keen to swiftly draw a line  under the controversy. According to Xinhua, Gu told the  court that "during those days last November, I suffered a mental  breakdown after learning that my son was in jeopardy". The son, Bo Guagua, and Heywood got into a dispute over a land project, Xinhua said, citing Gu's testimony. The court heard that Heywood had demanded 13 million pounds ($20  million), and sent Bo Guagua an email threatening "you will be  destroyed", according to a source who was in the room for the hearing  and requested anonymity. According to Gu's testimony, she felt that "I must fight to my death to stop the craziness of Neil Heywood". Gu then met Heywood for a drink in a hotel room in the southwestern city of Chongqing, where her husband was at the time Communist Party boss, according to Xinhua. She then killed him by pouring  poison into his mouth when he was drunk and scattered pills across the  hotel room floor to make it look as if he had overdosed.  The scandal came to light several months after the murder when  Chongqing police chief and Bo's right-hand man, Wang Lijun, fled to a US  consulate and alleged a cover-up. "The case has produced great losses to the Party and the country, for  which I ought to shoulder the responsibility, and I will never feel at  ease," Gu told the court. A domestic helper, Zhang Xiaojun, also admitted at the hearing to  aiding Gu in the murder, said Xinhua. Four police officers also admitted  on Friday to covering up Gu's involvement in the killing, a court  official said. After the scandal erupted, Bo was  dismissed as boss of Chongqing and from the party's Politburo and  placed under investigation. He has not been heard from since April. Gu's carefully stage-managed  trial, and that of four police officers accused of covering up the  murder, were being closely watched for any hints on Bo's likely fate,  although he has not been implicated in the Heywood murder. But in several reports on the case released by Xinhua late Friday,  totalling around 3,600 words, the former top politician was not  mentioned once. Xinhua said that a panel asked to  assess Gu's mental state had concluded that she had been treated for  depression and had taken drugs to combat the condition in the past. However, the experts said Gu still bore "full criminal responsibility". On Friday four senior police officials in Chongqing admitted covering up the murder to protect Gu. Tang Yigan, an official with the Hefei Intermediate Court in eastern  China, told reporters that a verdict in their case would be given at a  later date. "The defendants admitted that the  charge of bending the law for selfish ends was basically correct," he  said of the four, named as Guo Weiguo, Li Yang, Wang Pengfei and Wang  Zhi. The court heard how the officers covered up Gu's involvement in  Heywood's death by "forging interview scripts and hiding evidence",  agreeing to say he died of excessive alcohol consumption. On Saturday, Chinese Internet censors blocked searches for the worlds  "Gu Kailai", "Bo Xilai" and "Neil Heywood" although some web users did  manage to comment on the case. "It is not a judicial trial, it is a political trial and a trial for the privileged," said one web user named A'bang-kunshou. Gu's trial drew comparisons with  that of Chinese leader Mao Zedong's widow Jiang Qing, who along with the  three other members of the "Gang of Four" was convicted for fomenting  the tumultuous Cultural Revolution.  						 						 							 															Tweet 								                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          								Bookmark 								 								Print 							 						 						 							  	  	                                                        Badge the Comments! Give badges to the best comments you see! 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