MCLC: tell-all fells official

Denton, Kirk denton.2 at osu.edu
Fri Jan 18 09:48:16 EST 2013


MCLC LIST
From: kirk (denton.2 at osu.edu)
Subject: tell-all fells official
***********************************************************

Source: NYT (1/18/13):
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/19/world/asia/tell-all-on-the-internet-fells
-chinese-official.html

Tell-All on the Internet Fells Chinese Official
By ANDREW JACOBS 

BEIJING — Viewed through the lens of the Marxist tenets he so arduously
promoted, Yi Junqing’s transactional relationship with an ambitious female
researcher would have probably fallen into the category of exploitive.

Mr. Yi, 54, an impish scholar who is China’s top guardian of Communist
literature, is said to have provided the woman with a fellowship at his
research institute in exchange for $1,600. The sex and jewelry came later.

The allegations came to light last month after the woman, Chang Yan, 34,
posted online a self-indulgent and occasionally scintillating diary that
recounted a yearlong affair between the two married scholars. A few days
later, Ms. Chang tried to retract her sprawling tell-all but the damage
was done.

On Thursday Mr. Yi, director of the Central Compilation and Translation
Bureau, was dismissed from his job. Xinhua, the state news agency, kept
its dispatch brief and clean: Mr. Yi, it said, was let go over “lifestyle
issues.”

In a season when dozens of ethically challenged Chinese officials have
been felled by their lust for women, money and luxury timepieces, the
downfall of Mr. Yi prompted a hearty round of snickering and
schadenfreude, and not only because his vice minister rank made him one of
the more senior party members to lose his job over official malfeasance.

“People have come to treat such news as entertainment, but that’s only
because we feel so helpless,” said Zhu Ruifeng, a muckraking journalist
who specializes in the misdeeds of Chinese officials.

Mr. Yi’s main job, after all, was to propagate the leftist and often
puritanical teachings of Mao Zedong and other Communist luminaries at a
time when many Chinese have grown disenchanted by the seeming lack of
rectitude among their leaders. The headline in the Qianjiang Evening News
of Hangzhou seemed to sum up the public’s disgust: “Mouthful of
Marxism-Leninism, Mind Full of Filth and Vice.” The commentary went on to
lambast Mr. Yi for selling positions at his institute, which has a staff
of nearly 300 and is charged with translating Marxist tracts into Chinese
and Chinese government documents into a number of foreign languages.

Even if party leaders ultimately tossed Mr. Yi overboard, it was the
Internet that sealed his fate. Over the past two months, a parade of
corrupt officials have been exposed by enterprising journalists, anonymous
tipsters — or in Mr. Yi’s case, jilted lovers.

Recent cases include the relatives of a housing official in Henan Province
who had collected 31 properties and a deputy mayor in Guangdong Province
who was fired and placed under investigation after his cozy ties to a
local drug gang were publicly revealed by a disgruntled underling.

Given China’s normally tight censorship restrictions, some analysts have
suggested that the spate of scandals appearing online are a sign the new
leadership is committed to fighting corruption in the party. During his
inaugural address in November, Xi Jinping, the new Communist Party chief
and incoming president, warned that unchecked graft threatened to destroy
the party.

Indeed, Xinhua, on its microblog account, tried to put a positive spin on
the latest scandal, saying “The resolute management of problematic
officials shows the determination of the party’s fight against corruption.”

Judging from the deluge of biting commentary on Sina Weibo, the Chinese
equivalent of Twitter, not many people were convinced. “The shameful
step-down of this minister-level official once again proves the Internet
wisdom: rumors are but prophesies,” Xue Manzi, a well-followed
businessman, wrote on his microblog.

When it comes to Chinese-style scandal, Mr. Yi’s transgressions — at least
those alleged by his former lover — are not particularly spectacular. He
seems to have had a fondness for sushi and sake, and for lunchtime
tête-à-têtes at a Beijing hotel with Ms. Chang — 17 of them, by her count.

She described a man who enjoyed talking politics, but also about his own
achievements. “I am quite talented after all,” he supposedly said after
recounting the favorable impression he made on Mr. Xi, the party chief.
Ms. Chang does not exactly come off as a naïf. After bribing him with
Swarovski baubles, a bottle of Boss cologne and an additional $8,000, she
said she grew angry when Mr. Yi failed to secure her a permanent position
at his institute. She was also not pleased to learn he had other lovers.
In the end, she admits she tried to blackmail him, demanding nearly
$50,000 to leave him alone.

After the diary’s release, Ms. Chang tried to backpedal, saying she was
depressed and nearly delusional from working too much when she wrote its
100,000 characters. “In my spare time I put together a work of fiction,”
she said.

Patrick Zuo contributed research.





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