英媒发表薄瓜瓜临街小便照 爆其大二被牛津退学 * 阿波罗新闻网
新闻 > 国际新闻 > 正文
英媒发表薄瓜瓜临街小便照 爆其大二被牛津退学

英国《Daily Mail》这篇文章,采访了薄瓜瓜身边的人,爆了些在英国学校的料。

中国有句古谚说:“龙生龙,凤生凤,老鼠的儿子会打洞。”拥有世袭财富与享乐生活的少数中共太子党,或许是这句话的最佳写照。最近被解除重庆市委书记职务的薄熙来,被视为荒淫奢靡、玩弄特权,而其子薄瓜瓜也是“声名在外”,先前网路上曾流传其与女子饮酒作乐的照片,日前再有英国媒体批露其在该国求学期间的丑事
 

派对男孩:薄瓜瓜拥两女的系列图片在网上广为流传。

据英国《每日邮报》报导,薄瓜瓜现年24岁,曾就读于英国哈罗公学(Harrow School)和牛津大学,向来以挥霍无度闻名,他有如花花公子般的生活方式,可能在中国引起公愤。

报导说,当他在牛津大学贝利奥尔学院(Balliol College)研读政治经济哲学系时,据说因为读书不够认真,被校方勒令退学。

一篇学生杂志的文章将他描述为“定期花钱”,称他“与书本的关系紧张”。

据同侪表示,薄瓜瓜曾在牛津大学举办过丝绸之路舞会(Silk Road Ball),节目包括中国少林寺的功夫表演。他还曾安排电影明星成龙发表演说,甚至与他同台唱歌。

一名要求匿名的同侪指出,薄瓜瓜是出了名的舞会小子,在大一新生周(Freshers' Week),他买了许多香槟给每个人,同时在他的房间举行大型舞会。

在薄瓜瓜于大二被退学时,中共大使曾与几名特务前往贝利奥尔学院求情,声称他被退学会使他的父亲难堪,但校方事后并未给予他任何教学上的支援。

薄熙来日前回应外界对其子的批评称,薄瓜瓜没有个人资产,其在英国留学的费用来源是全额奖学金。薄随后被解除职务,目前行踪成谜。

但他也因喜爱量身定做的西服和捷豹汽车而闻名,在他任大连市长期间,他的办公室内有个遥控器,可以控制广场上的喷泉,可以让他选择通过扩音器飘荡在整座城市的音乐。

民意调查显示,中国社会大众──其中大多数生活在贫困之中──日益反对太子党招眼地炫耀财富,同时痛恨他们拥有特权。

在2010年发生的一件著名丑闻中,河北省地方官员李刚的儿子李启铭酒醉驾车,撞死一名大学生。他在逃逸前口出狂言:“我爸是李刚”,引发众怒。李启铭后遭逮捕并被判处6年徒刑。

  上周,“法拉利”成了中国互联网搜索引擎的被禁关键字,谣传共产党高官之子在高速车祸中丧生。

  据说两名女乘客重伤,法拉利458撞毁在桥上裂为两半。


How the playboy antics of Chinese politician's Harrow-educated son have fuelled rumours of a coup in Beijing

By Simon Parry

|

China's leaders are facing their biggest political crisis for years as they struggle to quell rumours of an attempted coup in Beijing amid splits in the ruling elite.

Officials have cracked down on internet reports of soldiers in the streets and gunfire in the leaders’ secure compound near the Forbidden City.

Although the reports are unconfirmed, they have fuelled growing public unease over power struggles at the top of the Communist party’s politburo as it prepares for a once-in-a-decade handover of power later this year.

One of lads: Bo Guagua, 25, centre takes part in the kind of crude stunt with fellow students that is said to have heaped embarrassment upon his ambitious father

One of lads: Bo Guagua, 25, centre takes part in the kind of crude stunt with fellow students that is said to have heaped embarrassment upon his ambitious father

Speculation has been rife that the country’s interior minister Zhou Yongkang, said to be a rival of the outgoing premier Wen Jiabao, was arrested early last week following the rumoured coup, but on Friday state television broadcast pictures of him meeting a visiting politician.

Zhou, 69, is a close ally of anti-corruption official Bo Xilai, 62, who has not been seen in public since he was spectacularly ousted and denounced by Wen Jiabao at the annual party congress earlier this month.

The dismissal of the powerful Mr Bo – who had been tipped to be a minister in the new generation of leaders in the autumn – throws the whole succession issue into turmoil and has wrecked hopes of a smooth and orderly transfer of power.

It now appears that the playboy lifestyle of Mr Bo’s 24-year-old Harrow and Oxford-educated son Bo Guagua may have contributed to his downfall by stirring up resentment in China.

Bo Guagua, the most high-profile of a group of sons and daughters of Chinese leaders labelled the ‘princelings’ because of their hereditary wealth and hedonistic lifestyles, has a reputation for lavish spending.

Party boy: Bo Guagua embraces two young friends in a series of snaps posted on the internet

Party boy: Bo Guagua embraces two young friends in a series of snaps posted on the internet

While studying philosophy, politics and economics at Balliol College, Oxford, he was reportedly ‘rusticated’ –  or suspended – for failing to study hard enough.

He was described in one student magazine article as ‘terminally spending’ and was said to have a ‘strained relationship with books’.

According to contemporaries, he once organised a Silk Road Ball at Oxford, which included a kung fu display by Shaolin temple monks from China. And he impressed fellow students by arranging for movie star Jackie Chan to deliver a lecture, and even sang on stage with him.

One contemporary, who asked not to be named, said: ‘He was well known as a party boy. I remember in freshers’ week he bought an enormous amount of champagne for everyone and had a huge party in his room.

‘When he was rusticated, the Chinese ambassador came to Balliol with some Chinese secret service guys to say that it was embarrassing for his father. ‘He was rusticated at the end of his second year and college did not give him any teaching support after that.’

Pictures of a dishevelled Bo Guagua drinking and cavorting with women have been widely circulated on websites to the bemusement of the Chinese public and the irritation of its leaders.

Nine days ago, irritated by criticism of his son’s behaviour, Mr Bo insisted that he had no assets of his own and his son’s education in England – which began at the age of 12 at Papplewick preparatory school in Ascot, Berkshire – had been funded by full scholarships.

Star: Bo Guagua impressed fellow students by arranging for movie star Jackie Chan to deliver a lecture at Oxford

Pulling strings: Bo Guagua impressed fellow students by arranging for movie star Jackie Chan to deliver a lecture at Oxford

He was then removed as head of the local party in the city of Chongqing, in South-West China, after his security chief attempted to defect to the USA, saying he feared for his life after apparently ordering an investigation into corruption in Mr Bo’s family.

The whereabouts of Bo Xilai and his family remained a mystery yesterday with mounting speculation that he is under arrest or detention as party bosses consider bringing corruption charges against him.

At his family’s mansion in Chongqing, the door was reportedly being answered by a young guard in full military uniform who told callers to go away and said Bo and his family members were not available to speak.

Father: Bo Xilai has been sidelined by China's Communist Party

Father: Bo Xilai has been sidelined by China's Communist Party

Bo Xilai – whose own father was a revolutionary hero and a friend of Chairman Mao – made his name by cracking down on gangs, preaching a return to egalitarian Communist principles, and by reviving the waving of red flags and the singing of Mao anthems.

But he was also known for his love of tailored suits and Jaguar cars – and while he was mayor of Dalian, in north east China, he had a remote control in his office that operated the fountain in the square outside and enabled him to choose the music that floated across the city through loudspeakers.

Opinion polls show the Chinese public – most of whom still live in grinding poverty – are increasingly opposed to conspicuous displays of wealth and resentful of the privileges given to officials’ children.

Significantly, current Chinese president Hu Jintao and premier Wen Jiabao  worked their way up from humble backgrounds and share some of the public resentment towards China’s ‘princelings’.

Last year, Li Tianyi, the 15-year-old son of a senior Chinese army general, was sent to a detention centre for a year after being convicted of assaulting a couple in the street who blocked the path of the BMW he was driving.

In a notorious case in 2010, Li Qiming, the drunken son of a senior police officer in China’s Hebei province, ran over and killed a university student, then told onlookers before fleeing: ‘My father is Li Gang.’ The 22-year- old was arrested and jailed for  six years.

In Sydney, Zeng Wei, the 43-year-old son of the former Chinese vice-president, bought a £20 million mansion overlooking the Harbour, then lodged plans to demolish it.

And last week, the word Ferrari was banned from internet search engines across China amid rumours that the son of a senior Communist Party official had been killed in a high-speed car crash in the capital.

Two female passengers were  said to have been seriously injured when the Ferrari 458 split in two after crashing into a bridge at 4am last Sunday.

Beijing police refused to confirm the incident or the identity of the people involved Meanwhile, the sense of public nervousness over the power struggle within Beijing was reflected in an editorial in the nationalistic Global Times on Thursday which said: ‘The whole of China is waiting for the party to speak.

‘The faster we hear an authoritative voice, the clearer society can be and the public can feel more secure.’



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2119940/Bo-Xilais-son-Bo-Guaguas-playboy-lifestyle-fuelled-rumours-Beijing-coup.html#ixzz1q926ea7v


责任编辑: 郑浩中   转载请注明作者、出处並保持完整。

本文网址:https://d3icyu3vmjgcad.cloudfront.net/2012/0325/240365.html