Deputy mayor of Baotou ‘thrown from building’? Mongolian: His death saved a lot of people

Wang Meibin, deputy mayor of Baotou, Inner Mongolia, has died after falling from a building in her home, triggering a public outcry. Ethnic Mongolians living abroad have speculated that Wang’s suicide may have been linked to the anti-corruption situation in Inner Mongolia and that he was probably “thrown from a building” because his death would have saved many people.

Police have ruled out the possibility of a criminal case after Wang Meibin fell to his death in his home in Yijin Horoqi, ordos city, on Dec 12, but the cause of his death is unknown and the circumstances are still under investigation.

Yang Haiying, a university professor living in Japan, said baotou’s deputy mayor, Wang Meibin, may have been “thrown from a building”.

“If you don’t kill yourself, if you don’t fall from a building, if you don’t kill yourself, if you don’t kill yourself, if you don’t kill yourself, if you don’t kill yourself, if you don’t kill yourself, then you will endanger your family,” he told Free Asia on Thursday. “So he has to sacrifice his own life for other benefits.”

Inner Mongolia is also rich in minerals and has high-level Communist Party interests at stake, Yang added. The fallen vice mayor, Wang Meibin, is from Shanxi Province, where many coal mining bosses have access to resources in Inner Mongolia.

Tara, an ethnic Mongolian living in Japan, also said wang’s sudden fall from a building in Inner Mongolia, where corruption in the coal industry is under investigation, may be related to the anti-corruption situation.

“Coal in Inner Mongolia is a very big industry, with a market share of more than 30 percent, but it has not brought any benefits to the local herdsmen,” Said Tala. “The Han people from other places usually come to cooperate with officials and ask for indicators.”

He believes there must have been other reasons for Wang meibin’s death. “It is also possible that his death saved many people,” he said.

Since the beginning of this year, Inner Mongolia, in accordance with the instructions of the CPC Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, has carried out the so-called reverse investigation for 20 years. On February 28, Inner Mongolia officially held a mobilization and deployment Conference on the Special Rectification work of Illegal And illegal Coal resources, claiming that the illegal and illegal coal resources have become the “biggest cancer and source of political ecology pollution” and must be removed and cleaned up. “

A number of officials in Inner Mongolia fell after the investigation began. A total of 410 coal-related cases, involving 534 people, including 24 officials at the department level and 94 at the county level, have been investigated and dealt with by discipline inspection authorities at all levels, Liu Qifan, secretary of the Inner Mongolia Commission for Discipline Inspection, said on Oct. 26.

On December 4, Bai Dun, director of the former Department of Land and Resources of Inner Mongolia, and five other departmental-level officials were investigated. Just two days before Wang meibin fell, Yunweidong, deputy director of the Standing committee of the Ordos Municipal People’s Congress, was under investigation for alleged illegal activities.

So far this year, several Communist Party officials have died after falling from buildings. In the early morning of November 9, He Bin, the former deputy chief judge of the case filing division of Quanzhou Court in Guangxi, died after falling from a building in his home.

On October 19, Zhang Zhongbin, a party member and vice president of the Hubei Provincial High Court, committed suicide in his office.

On August 16th Chen Fenjian, chairman of the Communist Party of China Railway Construction Group, fell to his death.

On July 8, Liao Mingguo, a member of the Standing Committee of the CPC Jingmen Municipal Committee and secretary general of the CPC Jingmen Municipal Committee, died after falling from a building in Jingmen city.

Qian Feng, former deputy party secretary and deputy director of the Huangshan Public Security Bureau in Anhui province, died after falling from a building at his home on June 27.

A big reason for the frequent suicides of Communist Party officials is thought to be a desire to deter the authorities from pursuing corruption. This would protect both colleagues and their families’ vested interests.