{"id":181188,"date":"2015-02-09T13:42:50","date_gmt":"2015-02-09T21:42:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/?p=181188"},"modified":"2015-02-09T13:42:50","modified_gmt":"2015-02-09T21:42:50","slug":"minitrue-li-xiaolin-swiss-leaks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2015\/02\/minitrue-li-xiaolin-swiss-leaks\/","title":{"rendered":"Minitrue: Li Xiaolin in Swiss Leaks"},"content":{"rendered":"

The following censorship instructions, issued to the media by government authorities, have been leaked and distributed online. The name of the issuing body has been omitted to protect the source.<\/em><\/p>\n

Social media and interactive platforms are kindly asked to immediately remove information and malicious commentary about the leaked HSBC Switzerland client list. Mobile clients, strictly check related content. (February 9, 2015)<\/p>\n

\u8bf7\u793e\u4ea4\u5a92\u4f53\u548c\u4e92\u52a8\u73af\u8282\u7acb\u5373\u6e05\u9664\u6709\u5173\u6c47\u4e30\u745e\u58eb\u50a8\u6237\u6cc4\u9732\u540d\u5355\u7684\u4fe1\u606f\u548c\u6076\u610f\u8bc4\u8bba\uff0c\u79fb\u52a8\u5ba2\u6237\u7aef\u6709\u5173\u5185\u5bb9\u8981\u4e25\u683c\u628a\u5173\u3002 [Chinese<\/a>]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) has released a sweeping report on over 100,000 clients of HSBC\u2019s Swiss branch. Reporters from 45 media organizations contributed research. Among those investors profiled is Li Xiaolin, co-chair of the state-owned China Power International Development Ltd.:<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n

Li Xiaolin, known as China\u2019s Power Queen, co-leads one of China\u2019s state-owned power monopolies and heads the Hong Kong-listed subsidiary that builds and manages large power plants in China. Fortune named her as one of the world\u2019s \u201c50 Most Powerful Women in Business\u201d in 2010 and Forbes put her on its list of \u201cAsian Women at The Top.\u201d ICIJ disclosed in January 2014 that she was the director of two British Virgin Islands companies registered in 2005. She served two terms on the advisory body to China\u2019s legislature. Li has attracted media attention and criticism for her expensive tastes and luxurious clothing. In 2013, The Telegraph reported that Li brokered secret deals to help Zurich Insurance gain a major stake in what was in 1995 China\u2019s largest private insurer, before foreign investment in the insurance sector was allowed in China. Liu Zhiyuan, her husband and grandson of a Chinese revolutionary, formerly worked in the insurance company as a senior executive.<\/p>\n

Li and her husband became HSBC clients in 2001. They were beneficial owners of one client account that was connected to five bank accounts that together held as much as $2.48 million in 2006\/2007. They were all held under the name of Metralco Overseas S.A., a Panama-registered company that was dissolved in 2012. [Source<\/a><\/strong>]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

Li has come under fire for sporting luxury coats<\/a> and suits<\/a> at the National People\u2019s Congress, and pearls at a lunch with factory workers<\/a>. She was also previously implicated in a bribery case involving the Swiss company Zurich Insurance<\/a>. Her father is Li Peng<\/a>, notorious for his role in the crackdown on protesters in Beijing in 1989.<\/p>\n

China ranks 61st among 203 countries with clients of HSBC Switzerland between 1988 and 2007: 246 Chinese clients found among the leaks held a total of USD517 million.<\/p>\n

Agence France-Press\u2019s Tom Hancock tweeted that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs removed a question about Li Xiaolin and Gao Jue from Monday\u2019s press conference transcript. Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng appears to have secured a job at J.P. Morgan for his \u201cimmature, irresponsible and unreliable\u201d son through an agreement with former J.P. Morgan senior executive William Daley<\/a>:
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\ud83d\ude41 Question about Li Peng’s daughter, commerce minister’s son scrubbed from China foreign ministry press conf report http:\/\/t.co\/hGoNXwL5RF<\/a><\/p>\n

\u2014 Tom Hancock (@hancocktom) February 9, 2015<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n