Confiscated Beijing skyscraper sold via online auction by Staff Writers Beijing (AFP) Aug 20, 2019 A Beijing skyscraper confiscated from a fugitive Chinese billionaire was sold in an online auction Tuesday for 5.18 billion yuan (US$734 million), the latest twist in a salacious saga dating back to before the 2008 Olympic Games. The spectacular 40-story Pangu Plaza, which dominates the area next to the Bird's Nest Olympic stadium that was the centrepiece of the Beijing Games, went on sale for 24 hours on the auction site of Chinese internet giant Alibaba. More than 145,000 internet users followed the auction, but only two bids were cast -- with the winner snapping up the property for little more than its reserve price. The buyer was YuCheng Zhiye, a Beijing-based property development and management company, according to the auction site. The building, shaped like a modernist dragon, was put on sale by creditors after being seized from billionaire Guo Wengui, who fled into exile after being accused of corruption in 2014. Now based in New York, he has become an outspoken critic of China's communist regime and President Xi Jinping, who he accuses of using an anti-graft campaign to bring down political opponents. Guo first bought a parcel of land to erect Pangu Plaza in 2002, but Beijing municipal authorities confiscated it five years later citing irregularities. He regained control of the property after a sex tape emerged featuring Beijing deputy mayor Liu Zhihua, who was responsible for allocating land around where the Olympic venues were built. Liu was later found guilty of massive corruption and given a suspended death sentence. The landmark Pangu Plaza consists of four office buildings making up the body of a dragon, with a uniquely shaped taller fifth structure as its head. It featured briefly in the 2014 movie "Transformers: Age of Extinction". In a video broadcast on Twitter last month, Guo said the reserve price of the building was well undervalued.
Shenzhen: The border city a world away from Hong Kong Shenzhen, China (AFP) Aug 17, 2019 The southern Chinese metropolis of Shenzhen borders the semi-autonomous territory of Hong Kong, but calls for greater freedom from protesters in the Asian financial hub meet with short shrift among their mainland neighbours. In the sprawling mainland city known for its high-tech market, many Shenzhen residents tell AFP they do not support the protests in Hong Kong, which has seen 10 weeks of pro-democracy rallies. "They're just ruining themselves," said one taxi driver, who did not want to give ... read more
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