\nAn article in the China Times posits that the health supplement brand Yilishen had “powerful and mysterious political connections,” which contributed to the scandal in which thousands of ant farmers lost all their money<\/a>. Following large-scale demonstrations by the farmers, news about the incident has been tightly controlled inside China.\n<\/p>\n
\nThis additional tidbit may help to answer that question. On October 11, ant farmers still hadn’t received payment; Yilishen promised that they would be paid on November 29. On October 27, Wang Fengyou sent out an open letter stating that they would receive a large payment on November 20. In hindsight, it appears that Wang Fengyou tried to postpone an unsavory incident from occurring during the 17th Communist Party Congress, which ran from November 15-21. On November 20, the farmers still hadn’t received any money, and a conflict broke out in the streets, but by then Liaoning Province’s Committee Secretary, Li Keqiang<\/a>, had already secured himself a seat on the Politburo Standing Committee. Whether there is some connection between these political associations and the tempo at which Wang Fengyou handled the situation, we’ll just have to wait and see. [Full text in Chinese]<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"