True Detective

China has handed a suspended death sentence to a telecom executive and sentenced another to 15 years in prison after convicting them of taking 5.1 million dollars in bribes from German electronics giant Siemens AG

Tuesday 5 July 2011

China has handed a suspended death sentence to a telecom executive and sentenced another to 15 years in prison after convicting them of taking 5.1 million dollars in bribes from German electronics giant Siemens AG, said a report seen on Monday.
Shi Wanzhong, 49, was convicted of accepting bribes while he was head of China Mobile Ltd's operations in the eastern province of Anhui from 2002 to 2009, the influential business daily Caixin reported on its website.
A court in Hebi city, in Anhui's neighbouring province of Henan, gave Shi a suspended death sentence. Subject to good behaviour in prison during the two-year suspension, such sentences are normally commuted to up to 20 years in prison.
Shi's initial trial in May was closed to the public and not reported by state media because it was deemed to involve state secrets. The sentence was upheld by a higher court last month.
The same court sentenced Shi's accomplice, Tian Qu, to 15 years in prison for helping him to secure the illegal payments from Siemens, the newspaper said.
It said Shi and Tian were apparently identified following investigations of Siemens business practices by the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) from 2006.
The SEC investigations concluded that Siemens had poured hundreds of millions of Euros into slush funds used for commercial bribery in contract bids in several countries.
After Siemens agreed to pay record fines totalling 1.33 billion dollars in the United States and Germany in late 2008, Chinese authorities received information on the involvement of Chinese citizens via unspecified diplomatic channels, Caixin said.
US court documents in 2008 said a culture of bribery and impunity had flourished at Siemens AG despite repeated warnings from outside and inside the firm.
In 2007, Siemens China fired about 20 employees in connection with corruption charges but the company declined to give details of the charges.

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Death sentence reportedly upheld for pastor

the death sentence handed down in 2010 for the crime of apostasy, to evangelical house pastor Pastor Yousef Nadarkhani, has reportedly been upheld by the third chamber of the Supreme Court in the Shia holy city of Qom.

Pastor Yousef Nadarkhani of the Church of Iran was arrested in his home city of Rasht on 13 October 2009 while attempting to register his church. His arrest is believed to have been due to his questioning of the Muslim monopoly on the religious instruction of children in Iran.

He was initially charged with protesting. However the charges against him were later changed to apostasy and evangelising Muslims.

Pastor Nadarkhani has been held in Lakan prison since that time, and was allowed access to a lawyer and visits from his family for most of his incarceration. He was tried and found guilty on 21 and 22 September 2010, when a death sentence was delivered verbally in court. Written confirmation of the sentence was delivered on 13 November 2010 by the 1st Court of the Revolutionary Tribunal.

The pastor's lawyer filed an appeal on 5 December 2010. However, following a six-month wait for an appeal hearing, the lawyer has confirmed that the appeal was unsuccessful, although so far there has been no official notification of this failure.

Pastor Nadarkhani had been imprisoned previously in December 2006, on charges of apostasy and evangelism, but was released two weeks later in January 2007.

In May, Ayatollah Mesbah Yadzi, a high-profile cleric in Iran, reportedly said that authorities had not done enough to stem the growth of Christian house churches, despite its massive investment in this effort. At a meeting with the heads of the Islamic Propagation Centre of Qom that month, Ayatollah Yadzi underlined the need for better discipline and proper supervision of those authorities involved in the suppression of churches. Yazdi suggested that the government set up a central system to monitor and coordinate the suppression of churches.

CSW’s Advocacy Director Andrew Johnston said: “ CSW condemns the decision to uphold this verdict in the strongest possible terms. The death sentence for the charge of apostasy is not codified in Iranian law. The ruling has deeply worrying implications for all Christians in Iran, and is yet another indicator of the regime's disregard for basic human rights and freedoms.

“Of particular concern is the fact that the Iranian regime often enacts death sentences without advance notice to prisoners' families, lawyers or even the prisoners themselves.

“Consequently, the international community must urgently apply pressure on the Iranian regime to rescind this unjust decision. Freedom to change one’s religion is a fundamental right which Iran pledged to uphold when it signed the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Iran must therefore be urged adhere to its commitments under international law.”

 

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