Yahoo – AFP, February 5, 2013
BEIJING
(AFP) - A Chinese police chief is alleged to have had at least 192 houses and a
fake identity card, state media said, the latest in a number of similar cases
that have sparked outrage online.
Zhao
Haibin, a senior police official in Lufeng in the southern province of
Guangdong, was reported by a businessman to have accumulated the properties
under his name and his company's, the Guangzhou Daily said.
The
businessman, Huang Kunyi -- who was involved in a dispute with the officer --
also said Zhao used a fake identity card to record a different name on company
documents, the newspaper reported.
Authorities
cancelled the false card after Huang's report in 2011, it added.
An official
of the Communist Party's discipline department for Lufeng told AFP Tuesday that
Zhao -- who is also the vice party secretary of a local county -- had been
investigated but the inquiry was over and he retained his public offices.
According
to the newspaper, Zhao said the properties were owned by his younger brother, a
businessman, and that he was only "managing" them for him.
A separate
report said Zhao or the company had 192 properties in the city of Huizhou, also
in Guangdong, and others in the cities of Shenzhen and Zhuhai.
The case is
the latest of a series of reports involving officials owning multiple houses
with different identity cards and residence permits.
Gong Aiai,
a vice president of a bank in the northern province of Shaanxi and a delegate
to the local legislature, was reported last month to hold more than 20 houses
worth nearly one billion yuan ($160 million), using four different residence
permits and three identity cards.
She was
detained by police Monday on suspicion of "forging official documents and
stamps", the state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
The cases
have sparked mounting criticism in Chinese social media over rampant graft and
high home prices that are running out of reach of the average citizen.
"(I)
finally realised that in China, properties are forever in the hands of a tiny
number of people," said a user of China's Twitter-like Sina Weibo.
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