Mum of Briton whose murder led to Bo Xilai's downfall slams Beijing for lack of compensation

BEIJING (AFP) - The mother of a Briton whose murder led to the downfall of high-flying Chinese politician Bo Xilai has hit out at Beijing for failing to pay compensation over his death, saying it left a "stain" on China's reputation.

Mr Neil Heywood was found dead in a hotel room in the south-western Chinese megacity of Chongqing in November 2011. The wife of one-time political star Bo was convicted of his murder while Bo's trial heard he acted to suppress a probe into the killing.

In a statement to The Wall Street Journal on Thursday, Mr Heywood's mother Ann said she had received assurances from the Chinese authorities that she and her family had a right to compensation, but had not received anything. The authorities had told her she could seek compensation in Chinese courts. "This is absurd," she said. "As is well known, China does not enjoy the rule of law: the Chinese courts and the whole legal process are controlled by the Communist Party."

She questioned whether Beijing's "inertia and evasiveness" might be related to "factional or personal struggles" or Bo's wife Gu Kailai's relationships "with past and present members of the Chinese leadership". Her son's murder and the Chinese authorities' subsequent conduct were "a stain on the reputation of a great country and provide chilling evidence of the dangers of doing business in today's China", she added.

Mr Heywood had been close to Bo and his family, but the 2012 trial of his wife Gu Kailai heard that the two had fallen out after a business deal went sour.

Bo, once one of the Communist Party's elite 25-member Politburo, was convicted of bribery, embezzlement and abuse of power and sentenced to life in prison last September after a trial that exposed murky machinations, high-living and homicide in his inner circle.

Mrs Ann Heywood posited an analogy reversing the nationalities, where the "well-known wife of a successful and ambitious member of the British Cabinet has befriended a Chinese businessman who is living in London".

"When, years later, the friendship sours, she murders the businessman by poisoning. Her husband, the Cabinet minister, assisted by the commissioner of the Metropolitan Police and a number of his senior deputies, conspires to cover up the murder."

In such a case she said, "one can be certain that the Chinese authorities would express public outrage, would hold the British government to account and would demand appropriate compensation for the family's loss".

Besides his mother, Mr Heywood is survived by a wife and two children.

Bo, once considered a candidate for the Politburo Standing Committee - China's most powerful body - was a populist but divisive figure, whose "red revival" policies when he ran Chongqing raised worries in some quarters over his leftist bent.

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.