MCLC: Devillers arrives in Beijing

Denton, Kirk denton.2 at osu.edu
Tue Jul 24 09:28:53 EDT 2012


MCLC LIST
From: kirk (denton.2 at osu.edu)
Subject: Devillers arrives in Beijing
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Source: NYT (7/23/12):
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/24/world/asia/patrick-devillers-bo-xilai-bei
jing.html

French Architect Tied to Disgraced Chinese Politician Arrives in Beijing
By JANE PERLEZ 

BEIJING — The French government said on Monday that its diplomats visited
a French architect over the weekend after he arrived in Beijing from
Cambodia in connection with the case of a disgraced Chinese politician and
his wife, but French officials disputed earlier accounts that the Chinese
had taken him into custody.

After news media reports on Saturday that the Chinese had taken the
architect, Patrick Henri Devillers, 51, into custody, a spokesman for the
French Foreign Ministry said that Mr. Devillers was being “housed” in
“proper conditions” and that he was not in prison. “He is well; he’s in
great health,” said the spokesman, Bernard Valero.

An official at the French Embassy in Beijing said French diplomats would
visit Mr. Devillers again this week. But officials did not specify his
whereabouts or say whether he was free to leave China.
Mr. Devillers was one of a group of Westerners friendly with the
now-disgraced Chongqing party chief, Bo Xilai, and his wife, Gu Kailai, as
they gained greater political standing in China in the 1990s and early
2000s. Mr. Devillers helped lay out a new street grid for the city of
Dalian when Mr. Bo was its dynamic mayor, and he later was a business
partner with Mr. Bo’s wife.

The Chinese couple’s downfall began after another Westerner who had been
part of their circle, Neil Heywood, was found dead last November in a
hotel room in Chongqing. The cause of death was initially ruled to be
alcohol poisoning. But in February, Mr. Bo’s police chief, Wang Lijun,
went to the United States Consulate in Chengdu and revealed that Ms. Gu
may have helped arrange Mr. Heywood’s murder, drawing international
attention to the case and opening a rare window into power struggles
within China’s top leadership.

The scandal quickly broadened. Mr. Bo, whose populist agenda had already
alienated some of the leadership, was stripped of his post amid
suggestions that he had an extensive surveillance network that reached the
party’s top echelon. He has not been seen publicly in months and is
believed to be held in Beijing. Ms. Gu is also in custody in connection
with Mr. Heywood’s case. Mr. Wang has not been seen since he was escorted
from the Chengdu consulate.

Mr. Devillers’s whereabouts had been a mystery for months, until a
reporter for The New York Times found him in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, in May.
At the time, he said he had no interest in getting involved in the
investigation by the Chinese into the Heywood murder.

But he then appeared to become the object of a tug of war between France
on one side and Cambodia and China on the other. China is Cambodia’s
biggest foreign donor, and it enjoys Cambodia’s loyalty in many disputes.

On June 13, Mr. Devillers was arrested in Phnom Penh at China’s request.
Cambodian officials, aware of protests from France, said at the time that
they would not send the architect to China without proof of wrongdoing. He
was released at the request of China last Tuesday, the Cambodian
authorities said, and he boarded a plane for Shanghai the same day.

Before leaving, he made a video for the Cambodian authorities in which he
said that he was leaving for China voluntarily and that he would go to
Beijing. It showed Mr. Devillers sitting on a couch and answering
questions in French from what appeared to be a Cambodian official holding
a microphone.

“I reiterate that I’m leaving freely to this destination,” he said.

Scott Sayare contributed reporting from Paris.







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