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Ex-bank chief 'held 4 hukou to buy property'

2013-01-23 09:16 China Daily     Web Editor: Liu Xian comment
One of the properties owned by Gong Aiai in Beijing's Chaoyang district. Provided to China Daily

One of the properties owned by Gong Aiai in Beijing's Chaoyang district. Provided to China Daily

Police are investigating a former bank executive who was accused of holding four hukou, or household registrations, that she used to buy many properties.

Gong Aiai, 49, a former deputy chief of Shenmu Rural Commercial Bank, was exposed in an online post on Jan 17 that said she used two identity cards, one of them fake, to buy expensive properties.

Identity cards are issued on the basis of hukou.

News media have reported that she owns more than 20 properties in Beijing, worth 1 billion yuan ($160 million).

On Monday, a whistleblower told Beijing Times that Gong had four IDs and four hukou, including one near the Olympic Park in Beijing, the newspaper reported on Tuesday.

Police in Shenmu county, Shaanxi province, canceled a fake ID card of Gong's on Saturday. They said Gong registered it in neighboring Shanxi province in 2006 by using her real photo, but under a different name, Gong Xianxia, and a different birth date.

The chief of the police station and the officer who handled Gong's application in Linxian county, Shanxi province, were suspended, pending further investigation.

The police station released a statement on Saturday acknowledging the officers' negligence regarding the fake ID.

Police in both provinces met with each other and vowed to investigate and provide timely disclosure of their findings.

Police in Gong's native Shenmu county could not find her because she had shut off her mobile phone.

Police have asked her relatives and friends to persuade her to turn herself in or they will find and forcibly detain her, the Shaanxi provincial radio station reported on Tuesday.

The police station in Beijing, where Gong reportedly had a fake ID, declined to comment. Wang Wenjie, a publicity official from the Beijing police bureau, said he had just read the news reports and the bureau had yet to verify the allegations.

Gong told Xinhua News Agency on Friday that she forged her ID for "superstitious reasons". She also said the money used to buy properties was from her family's coal business.

The China Banking Regulatory Commission's branch in Shaanxi is reviewing Gong's financial records while she served as a deputy chief in the Shenmu bank.

The bank said it dismissed her on Saturday, and Gong claimed that she had resigned in June.

Several officials have been sacked in similar cases after they were found to hold fake IDs and hukou.

On Jan 13, the former housing administration official Zhai Zhenfeng was arrested on suspicion of corruption and expelled from the Party after a whistle-blower revealed that his family owned 31 houses in Zhengzhou, Henan province.

Zhai's daughter owned 11 properties in an affordable-housing project overseen by Zhai. Zhai and his wife, their daughter and son all had two hukou from different cities. Police have canceled the fake ones.

Former head of a tobacco monopoly bureau Chen Wenzhu was also dismissed from his post in Shanwei, Guangdong province, and expelled from the Party in October 2011, for corruption. Police found Chen had a fake ID and used it to frequently visit Hong Kong and Macao.

On Jan 16, the former police chief in Fengyang county, Anhui province, Tao Yong, stood trial on charges of bribery. He registered a fake ID in February 2011 because it was more convenient to take bribes under a false identity and conceal his fortune.

Dong Fangwei, a lawyer at Dacheng Law Offices in Beijing, said these cases have hurt the credibility of the hukou policy and weakened public trust in police.

Fake IDs and hukou can lead to serious consequences, as the holder may buy houses, rent out properties on lease, ask for bank loans, and run businesses, under a false ID, Dong said.

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