Setelah kasus tuduhan korupsi , plus tuduhan pembunuhan yang dilakukan oleh  
istri Bo Xilai,baru sekarang keluar berita2 yang "mengerikan" yang dilakukan 
oleh sang anak-nya  Bo Xilai yang bernama Bo Guagua.
Yang mengherankan, kenapa media masa tidak memberitakan soal "ugal2-an" nya 
anak remaja ini, padahal kejadian pesta pora dan ugal2-an ini sudah berkisar 
dalam kurun waktu lama, di Inggris sewaktu remaja Bo Guagua itu menuntut ilmu 
disana.
Apakah anak2 para cukong dan birokrat2 asal Indonesia, yang sekolah di LN juga 
ada yang se-'nyawa" dengan Bo Guagua? Sa Aku tidak pernah menjumpai atau tahu 
atau kenal dengan anak2 para pejabat ataupun para cukong asal Indonesia sewaktu 
aku studi di Jerman. Mungkin ada member disini yang bisa sedikit menguak 
kejadian "ugal2-an" siswa2 Indonesia yang belajar di LN.(kalau ada tuh)
Rupanya koaran-nya RRT yang lantang bahwa korupsi mendapat kemplangan di RRT, 
sepertinya yang dikemplang ya tikus dan rayap kecil saja. Yang gede/ 
mafiosi/kriminal2 koruptor klas kakap rupanya ngak begitu kena kendalanya???
Harry Adinegara
  


 

 


________________________________


 




>
> 
>
>________________________________
>  
>Champagne, shisha parties and VERY little work: How Oxford tutors complained 
about playboy son of Chinese 'murder' couple 
>       * Bo Guagua,  who is now in hiding, frustrated his tutors by becoming 
> well known for hosting  wild parties at his room at Balliol College, Oxford 
>       * He later  moved to a flat with 'gold taps, a concierge and a 
> vineyard' 
>       * PPE student  forced to sit 'penal' exams after failing to work hard 
> enough 
>       * But  powerful parents tried to prevent tutors disciplining him 
>       * Now fall  from grace after mother becomes prime suspect in murder of  
> Briton
> By Vanessa Allen, Peter Simpson and Daniel Bates
>PUBLISHED: 22:53 GMT, 12 April 2012 | UPDATED: 13:04 GMT, 
13 April 2012 
>
>As the son of a 
powerful Chinese family, he was expected to act with decorum and meet the 
highest standards.
>But Bo Guagua, 24 - 
now in hiding after his parents were engulfed in scandal over the death of a 
British businessman - gained a reputation as a playboy, cashing in on his 
extraordinary wealth while studying at Oxford.
>He has not been seen in public since his mother Gu 
Kailai was named as a suspect in the murder of Old Harrovian expat Neil 
Heywood, 
prompting her politician husband’s suspension from China’s ruling Communist 
Party.
> 
>    Socialite: Bo Guagua, seen posing with his then 
girlfriend Lale Can, right, at a University party, gained a reputation for his 
lavish lifestyle, but was held in contempt by his Oxford University tutors 
>But new details have emerged about the 
lavish lifestyle enjoyed by the Oxford student, who was renowned for hosting 
champagne and shisha parties in his room at Balliol College, where he read 
Politics, Philosophy and 
Economics.
>
>It is understood that 
his performance fell short of what was expected and he was made to sit ‘penal’ 
exams.
>
>But in an extraordinary 
twist – and in an astonishing example the influence of his parents before their 
spectacular fall from grace – Chinese officials tried to intervene to prevent 
tutors from disciplining him over his lack of work, it is 
understood.
>‘An official turned up with 
a couple of men in suits. They said it was very embarrassing because education 
was highly valued in China, and it was embarrassing to his father and 
grandfather. 
>‘His tutors replied if 
that was the case they should get him to work harder’, a college source told 
the 
Telegraph.
>A source at the college told 
MailOnline: 'Of course, it did not affect how the college behaved. 
>
> 
> Living it up: Bo Guagua, centre, was well known for his 
lavish lifestyle and love of partying during his days as a student at Oxford 
University
>  
>'The college treated 
him like any other student. And indeed, where there were concerns, there was 
action taken.' 
>
>This visit did not 
prevent the college suspending him for a year shortly after. He moved into a 
flat, which, according to a student newspaper, included ‘taps of gold, a 
concierge and a small vineyard’.
>Despite the apparent lack of dedication, Mr Bo 
graduated with a 2:1, but his peers have told how tutors would not hide their 
contempt for him.
>
>Mr Bo was 
remembered by friends to be ambitious to climb the ranks within the Oxford 
Union. Friends said ‘he never held back on spending’, according to the 
Telegraph, constantly offering to buy people drinks. 
>
>In one case, his attempt to become the union’s 
librarian, or vice presidents, saw a large contingent of Chinese students 
arrive 
to vote for Mr Bo. 
>
>But his 
election bid failed when many of his supporters were told they were not 
eligible 
to cast a ballot because they had only registered the previous 
day.
>He was also said to have arranged 
a lecture at the college by movie star Jackie Chan and organised a ball where 
BBC Radio 1 DJ Tim Westwood performed. 
>Mr Bo refused to comments on events surrounding his 
family when contacted by reporters.
> Playboy: Bo Guagua, right, with his girlfriend Lale 
Can, centre, and martial arts film star Jackie Chan
> 
> 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
> 
> Party boy: Bo Guagua embraces two young friends in a 
series of snaps posted on the internet
>His mother could face execution if convicted of the 
41-year-old’s murder, and her husband Bo Xilai has been placed under house 
arrest.
>Mr Heywood’s Chinese widow Wang 
Lulu spoke of her heartbreak over the death for the first time yesterday, 
telling the Daily Mail: ‘I am so sad.’
>Chinese authorities revealed on Tuesday that Mrs Gu was 
a suspect in Mr Heywood’s death and said she and her son Bo Guagua had enjoyed 
a 
good relationship with the business consultant until a ‘conflict over economic 
interests’.
> 
>Murder: British businessman and Old Harrovian expat 
Neil Heywood
>The announcement prompted 
shockwaves in China, where Guagua’s father Mr Bo – himself the son of a 
Communist Party figure of the Mao era – was a party leader in the city of 
Chongqing and expected to rise to a senior position within the national 
leadership. 
>
>Guagua, who also 
attended Harrow, had previously faced criticism after photographs appeared on 
social networking sites including Facebook and Twitter, showing him daubed with 
lipstick and partying with girls at Oxford University.
>The pictures caused embarrassment for his family in 
China and raised questions about how a Communist politician could afford to 
send 
his son to one of Britain’s most prestigious private schools.
>Mr Heywood first entered Mr Bo’s orbit when the family 
determined Guagua should go to Harrow.
>He acted as a mentor to the boy, who was then educated 
in Britain from the age of 12, attending Papplewick School in Ascot, Berkshire, 
before he was accepted at Harrow.
>His 
family insisted he had won scholarships to attend Harrow and Oxford. 
>
>However, he was eventually 
suspended for a year, and contemporaries noted the Ferrari-driving student had 
a 
‘strained relationship with books’.
>
>His privileged background made him a so-called 
princeling in China’s ‘red aristocracy’ and gave him a celebrity status. 
>
> 
> Connections: British businessman Neil Heywood, pictured 
at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, was a close friend of the wife of 
influential anti-corruption campaigner Bo Xilai
>
>A brief relationship with Chen Xiaodan, the 
grand-daughter of one of China’s top bankers, was followed with such avid 
interest that the young couple were given a police escort during a holiday in 
Tibet.
>
>He is now said to be in the 
U.S., where he is studying at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of 
Government. 
>
>His studies end next month and it 
is thought he may apply for asylum in the U.S.
>
>Last month, after his father was sacked as a party 
leader in Chongqing, he told The Times: ‘My personal desire is to focus on my 
studies and be left out of the political intrigues.’ Guagua has shut down his 
accounts on Facebook and the Chinese equivalent of Twitter, and China’s censors 
have stopped internet searches on his name.
> 
> Top education: Bo Guagua was sent to the famous Harrow 
School where he was mentored by Neil Haywood
> Meanwhile in Beijing Mr 
Heywood’s widow Wang Lulu spoke briefly of her grief. 
>
>His body was discovered in a hotel room last November. 
Chinese authorities initially blamed the death on excess alcohol, but there is 
speculation he was poisoned.
>
>At her 
family’s home in an exclusive gated compound, Mrs Heywood said: ‘I am so sorry. 
I am so sad.’
>
>Mr Heywood was 
reported to have applied for a British passport for his wife in the months 
before his death. Their children Olivia, 11, and Peter, seven, already have 
British citizenship.
>
>He also told 
friends he had handed over documents to a British lawyer, detailing the 
overseas 
investments of the Bo family, as an ‘insurance policy’, the Wall Street Journal 
reported.  
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

Post message: prole...@egroups.com
Subscribe   :  proletar-subscr...@egroups.com
Unsubscribe :  proletar-unsubscr...@egroups.com
List owner  :  proletar-ow...@egroups.com
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    proletar-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    proletar-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    proletar-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke