ONE KILLED, ANOTHER INJURED IN MAKWANPUR
Kathmandu, 8 July:
One person died and another was injured in a road accident in Makawanpur
district last night, RSS reports from Hetauda..
The accident took place when the bus (registration number Na. 3 kha 1647) heading towards Hetauda from Birgunj overturned on the road near the Banpaidawar Office here last night. The deceased was identified as Ganesh Bista, 40, of Hetauda Municipility-9. The injured Bista died while undergoing treatment at Bharatpur Hospital Chitwan, said the District Police Office. Likewise, another man injured in the mishap is identified as Sujan Lama of Chhatiwan VDC-9, Makawanpur. He is being treated at the Bharatpur Hospital. The bus driver Madhu Sudan Bhandari has been held for interrogation, said the Makawanpur District Police Office. |
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SUSPENDED DEATH SENTENCE FOR FORMER CHINESE MINISTER
Kathmandu, 8
July:: A Chinese court gave former railways minister Liu Zhijun a suspended
death sentence, the highest-ranking official to be punished for corruption
since new leaders took office vowing to clean up the ruling
Communist, AFP reports from Beijing. Party.
Once hailed as the "father" of China's flagship high-speed rail network, Liu, 60, was convicted of bribery and abuse of power by a court in Beijing, the official Xinhua news agency said.
State television showed the diminutive, bespectacled defendant standing impassively in the dock in a dark jacket, flanked by two police.
Liu was sacked as railways minister in 2011 after eight years in the post, and the scandal surrounding him is reported to have involved as much as 800 million yuan ($130 million).
He was charged and convicted of accepting 64.6 million yuan in bribes to help 11 people secure contracts and promotions, Xinhua said, adding that he "took advantage of his positions" and "inflicted colossal losses in the public assets, violating rights and interests of the state and the people".
"Liu Zhijun was sentenced to the death penalty with two years' suspension," a court official told AFP by phone.
Under Chinese law the death penalty can be imposed for taking bribes exceeding 100,000 yuan. Suspended death sentences are normally commuted to life imprisonment.
The court also ordered all of Liu's personal property to be confiscated and issued a separate sentence of 10 years in prison for abuse of power, Xinhua said.
China's rail system -- which has cost hundreds of billions of dollars -- has been one of the ruling party's flagship development projects in recent years, and the country now boasts the world's longest high-speed network.
But a high-speed crash in the eastern city of Wenzhou killed some 40 people in 2011, sparking public criticism that authorities compromised safety in their rush to expand the network.
The railways ministry was disbanded in March, with its administrative functions handed to the transport ministry and its commercial role to a new China Railway Corporation.
The country's new leaders under President Xi Jinping have vowed to fight corruption, identifying it as a threat to Communist Party rule.
In January, Xi was quoted by state media telling the party's corruption watchdog there would be "no leniency" against wrongdoing.
In May Xinhua reported that China was investigating a former top state planner Liu Tienan for alleged "serious disciplinary violations" -- phrasing which typically refers to corruption.
Bo Xilai, former party chief of the southwestern metropolis of Chongqing, is also expected to face trial for allegedly taking bribes and helping cover up his wife's murder of a British businessman.
Numerous low-level officials have come under investigation after social media users exposed alleged corruption, with some cases involving expensive watches or multiple mistresses.
A longtime railways official, Liu studied transport management and held senior posts in several provinces before joining the national railways ministry in 1994 and rising to minister in 2003.
Users of China's popular microblog service Sina Weibo were sceptical about his punishment, with some condemning it as too lenient.
"Such good news for corrupted officials. This is encouraging them, because the worst result will just be a suspended death penalty," said one.
Another lamented: "Oh dear, now he's going to keep wasting taxpayers' money."
Once hailed as the "father" of China's flagship high-speed rail network, Liu, 60, was convicted of bribery and abuse of power by a court in Beijing, the official Xinhua news agency said.
State television showed the diminutive, bespectacled defendant standing impassively in the dock in a dark jacket, flanked by two police.
Liu was sacked as railways minister in 2011 after eight years in the post, and the scandal surrounding him is reported to have involved as much as 800 million yuan ($130 million).
He was charged and convicted of accepting 64.6 million yuan in bribes to help 11 people secure contracts and promotions, Xinhua said, adding that he "took advantage of his positions" and "inflicted colossal losses in the public assets, violating rights and interests of the state and the people".
"Liu Zhijun was sentenced to the death penalty with two years' suspension," a court official told AFP by phone.
Under Chinese law the death penalty can be imposed for taking bribes exceeding 100,000 yuan. Suspended death sentences are normally commuted to life imprisonment.
The court also ordered all of Liu's personal property to be confiscated and issued a separate sentence of 10 years in prison for abuse of power, Xinhua said.
China's rail system -- which has cost hundreds of billions of dollars -- has been one of the ruling party's flagship development projects in recent years, and the country now boasts the world's longest high-speed network.
But a high-speed crash in the eastern city of Wenzhou killed some 40 people in 2011, sparking public criticism that authorities compromised safety in their rush to expand the network.
The railways ministry was disbanded in March, with its administrative functions handed to the transport ministry and its commercial role to a new China Railway Corporation.
The country's new leaders under President Xi Jinping have vowed to fight corruption, identifying it as a threat to Communist Party rule.
In January, Xi was quoted by state media telling the party's corruption watchdog there would be "no leniency" against wrongdoing.
In May Xinhua reported that China was investigating a former top state planner Liu Tienan for alleged "serious disciplinary violations" -- phrasing which typically refers to corruption.
Bo Xilai, former party chief of the southwestern metropolis of Chongqing, is also expected to face trial for allegedly taking bribes and helping cover up his wife's murder of a British businessman.
Numerous low-level officials have come under investigation after social media users exposed alleged corruption, with some cases involving expensive watches or multiple mistresses.
A longtime railways official, Liu studied transport management and held senior posts in several provinces before joining the national railways ministry in 1994 and rising to minister in 2003.
Users of China's popular microblog service Sina Weibo were sceptical about his punishment, with some condemning it as too lenient.
"Such good news for corrupted officials. This is encouraging them, because the worst result will just be a suspended death penalty," said one.
Another lamented: "Oh dear, now he's going to keep wasting taxpayers' money."
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