The wife of a disgraced
Chinese politician once tipped as a future leader has been detained over
the suspected murder of a British national.
Her husband Bo Xilai, former mayor of Chongqing, has been stripped of key posts in the ruling Communist Party.
He had been one of China's most popular politicians.
But he suffered a spectacular fall from grace last month when he was sacked as party chief in Chongqing.
This came after his police chief Wang Lijun spent a day holed up in the US consulate in Chengdu.
It was rumoured that Mr Wang had been attempting to defect.
The suggestion was that he had been demoted by an angry Mr Bo after the officer had alerted him to the fact that the mayor's family was the subject of a police investigation linked to Mr Heywood's death.
Mr Bo has been dismissed from the Communist Party's hugely powerful 25-member Politburo, and the 300-member Central Committee due to suspected "serious discipline violations", Xinhua reported on Tuesday.
Gu Kailai "has been transferred to judicial authorities on suspected crime of intentional homicide" of British business consultant Neil Heywood, the agency also said.
Mr Heywood - a close friend of Mr Bo - died in
Chongqing last November. It was claimed at the time that the
41-year-old died of over-use of alcohol but his friends said he did not
drink that much.
A reinvestigation of his death had found that both Bo's wife and son "were on good terms with Heywood.. however, they had conflict over economic interests, which had been intensified," Xinhua said.
"According to reinvestigation results, the existing evidence indicated that Heywood died of homicide, of which [Gu Kailai] and Zhang Xiaojun, an orderly at Bo's home, are highly suspected," the agency added.
News of the reinvestigation was welcomed by UK Foreign Secretary William Hague, who had recently called on the Chinese authorities to look again at Mr Heywood's death.
"The Chinese are doing as we asked them to do and we now look forward to seeing those investigations take place and in due course hearing the outcome of those investigations," he said.
The developments are the biggest scandal to hit China in many years.
Mr Bo, who made his name taking on corruption in Chongqing, had been expected to be elected to the Politburo's standing committee later this year - as the party prepares for a once-in-a-decade change of leadership.
The nine-man standing committee effectively rules the country.
Source: BBC News
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