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陈用林有关“蓝甫儿子被绑架”的两次说法对比------- |
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我觉得陈用林两次说法本身并无矛盾,但第一次英文表达显然十分笨拙 -- 安魂曲 - (1002 Byte) 2005-6-22 周三, 下午10:54 (176 reads) |
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作者:Anonymous 在 罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org
陈用林现在还在重复这种说法,就不是表达的问题了。
下面有两篇文章和连接请参考:
第一篇
Chinese kidnap claim in doubt
http://www.thecouriermail.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,15577033%255E421,
00.html
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,15577033-2,00.html
By Catherine Armitage and Cameron Stewart
June 11, 2005
From:
SERIOUS doubts have been cast on one of the key claims renegade Chinese
diplomat Chen Yonglin used to justify his attempted defection to Australia.
Mr Chen accused Beijing of mounting a kidnapping operation on Australian
soil to take hostage the student son of a fugitive Chinese politician to
coerce his return home to face justice.
But yesterday he backed away from the claims when confronted by new evidence.
"I said that in fear, and I don't want to talk about it again AAA," he
told The Weekend Australian.
The runaway diplomat had earlier told The Australian through a minder, Jin
Chin, that the student, Lan Meng, was kidnapped by Chinese agents in Sydney,
"taken by fishing boat to a Chinese cargo ship on the high seas", then held
hostage in China to force his father to give himself up.
Advertisement:
The father, Lan Fu, returned to China from Australia in February 2000. In
November that year he was sentenced to death for taking bribes in China's
biggest ever corruption scandal, a $US6billion smuggling racket centred
on the southern port of Xiamen where Mr Lan was a deputy mayor.
But Lan Fu's lawyer, Zhu Yongping, emphatically denied the kidnap story
this week, insisting his client had given himself up voluntarily.
Mr Zhu told The Weekend Australian that Lan Meng was not in China at the
time of his father's trial.
The Weekend Australian has also established that a young man named Lan Meng,
now 23, was living in the Melbourne bayside suburb of Sandringham from November
1999 until November 2000.
This suggests that he was in Melbourne for at least three months before
Mr Lan returned to China, casting further doubt on the story that he was
kidnapped and taken to China in the lead-up to Mr Lan's return.
It was reported in February 2000 that Lan Fu had turned himself over to
the Chinese Embassy in Australia. An Australian Foreign Affairs spokesman
was quoted on February 23 in The South China Morning Post saying that Mr
Lan had arrived in Australia a month before and left about two weeks later,
and "as far as we know, he left of his own free will".
Back in China he was held at a detention centre in Quanzhou City, Fujian
Province, before his trial in September 2000. His lawyer Zhu Yongping of
the Datong Law Office of Guangdong said his client, sentenced to death with
a two year reprieve, was now in Zhangzhou City Prison where his death sentence
is yet to be formally commuted.
Whether or not the alleged kidnapping occurred, it is believed Mr Lan's
wife Lai Chongxin and Lan Meng are still in Australia. Ms Lai was also reported
to have been on China's wanted list in connection with the Xiamen scandal.
Asked where the wife Ms Lai and her son Lan Meng are now, the diplomat would-
be defector Mr Chen said "no-body knows that more clearly than the Australian
government". The Quanzhou Evening News reported that in July 2001, police
intercepted a package sent to Mr Lan who was still at Quanzhou detention
centre containing a note inserted in a toothpaste tube which read, in part:
"Wife and son still in Australia, not arrested. Say nothing."
Additional reporting: Natasha Robinson
第二篇
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,15647716-421,00.html
Friends scoff at kidnap claims
By Catherine Armitage and Jennifer Sexton
June 18, 2005
From:
FRIENDS of the youth who dissident Chinese diplomat Chen Yonglin claimed
had been kidnapped by agents and smuggled back to China have scoffed at
the hostage allegations.
A Melbourne antiques dealer and family associate who helped the youth, Lan
Meng, with a property deal in Melbourne seven years ago said there was no
kidnapping.
Hu Youyi, who has divided his time between Melbourne and China for 30 years,
said Lan Meng was not captured and used by Chinese agents as bait in 2000
to force the return of his fugitive father Lan Fu, wanted over a $US6 billion
($7.7 billion) smuggling racket.
Advertisement:
"No, no, no, this story is not true," Mr Hu, 67, told the The Weekend Australian
at his homeland on the sleepy island of Gulangyu.
"I feel in my heart, 100 per cent, Lan Fu went back to China by himself."
Mr Hu helped the family in 1998 when Lan Meng at 16 had put a deposit on
a new townhouse in the Melbourne suburb of Sandringham but was too young
to go through with the settlement.
A deal was arranged whereby Mr Hu's trust account Lemongrove finalised the
off-the-plan purchase and Lan Meng took ownership of the title when he came
of age two years later.
Lemongrove sold the property for $540,000 in January 2001, official records
show.
The new owner, Vicki Standfield, said yesterday that for some time after
settlement letters from debt collection agencies were sent to the house.
John Howard's office has referred Mr Chen's allegations of abduction to
the Australian Federal Police.
"The AFP is currently undertaking inquiries to establish the validity of
the claims," an AFP spokeswoman said.
Mr Chen, who last week backed away from his claims, did not return The Weekend
Australian's calls yesterday.
Lan Fu was the deputy mayor in charge of public security at the southern
port city of Xiamen until January 2000, when he apparently fled to Australia.
He was sought by Chinese authorities for his involvement in China's biggest
corruption scandal, a $US6 billion smuggling scam centred on Xiamen city.
Within a month, Lan Fu returned to China, where he was immediately detained
and has remained in jail, one hour's drive from his former office. He was
sentenced to death in November 2000 but the punishment may be commuted to
life imprisonment.
Melbourne policy consultant Max Fairchild, who had also helped the Lan family,
said he had accompanied Lan Fu, his wife and son to a medical clinic in
Box Hill earlier on the same day he believed Lan Fu caught a plane from
Tullamarine airport to China to face the charges.
"He came to visit and he returned of his own volition," said Mr Fairchild.
Mr Fairchild said of the kidnapping claim: "I can't formally say it didn't
happen, but there is nothing I know that suggests it did.
"In Australian parlance, I would say it is just bullshit."
Mr Hu's wife Lillian, who helped Lan Fu's wife in Melbourne after the jailing,
described the kidnapping story as "a joke".
"(Mrs Lan) was very worried but she never mentioned anything like that,"
said Mrs Hu.
Mr Hu said his only payment for helping with the property purchase was a
$5 bowl of noodles.
He had sporadic contact with the youth, who went to Melbourne's Brighton
Grammar and graduated last year from University of Melbourne with a BA in
commerce.
Mrs Hu said Mrs Lan, had phoned her from Melbourne six months ago, saying
her son had graduated and was looking for work..
The alleged boss of the Xiamen smuggling racket, Lai Changxing, is in Canada,
where he has been fighting a six-year legal battle to avoid being sent
back to China.
He told The Weekend Australian through an intermediary that Lan Fu had solicited
from him a $300,000 bribe in 1998 to buy a property for his son in Australia.
It is the same bribe, reported in China as 5.05 million yuan, that was
the basis of Lan Fu's conviction.
Lan Fu's lawyer has also insisted that his client returned to China voluntarily.
Additional reporting: Natasha Robinson
作者:Anonymous 在 罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org |
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