
Chinese Court Sentences Ex-Official to Death in $325m Bribery Case
Yang Youlin’s rare capital punishment for economic crimes underscores the severity of Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign.
A court in eastern China sentenced former Nanjing development official Yang Youlin to death on Monday for accepting more than 2.2 billion yuan ($325 million) in bribes over three decades, alongside convictions for embezzlement, money laundering, abuse of power and misappropriation of public funds. The Changzhou Intermediate People’s Court permanently stripped the 69-year-old of political rights and ordered the confiscation of all personal assets, while authorities said efforts to recover remaining illicit proceeds would continue.
The court stated that Yang exploited his positions between 1993 and 2023 to manipulate engineering contracts, land transfers, business projects and financial transactions in exchange for payments, causing “exceptionally heavy losses to the interests of the state and the people.” Chinese state media reported that Yang pleaded guilty and expressed remorse during his trial, and that he had cooperated with investigators. The court, however, deemed his offences so grave that his assistance was insufficient to warrant a more lenient punishment.
Death sentences for economic crimes remain rare in China and are typically reserved for cases involving sums exceeding 1 billion yuan. In 2024, former Inner Mongolia official Li Jianping was executed for embezzlement and bribery totalling more than 3 billion yuan. Former China Huarong chairman Lai Xiaomin was executed in 2021 for accepting 1.8 billion yuan in bribes. Other high-value cases have resulted in suspended death sentences later commuted to life imprisonment, particularly when defendants returned assets or reported on other offenders.
Yang’s prosecution forms part of the anti-corruption campaign launched by President Xi Jinping more than a decade ago, which has investigated millions of officials across the bureaucracy, military and state-owned financial sector. Chinese authorities present the drive as a law-enforcement effort to root out graft. Some observers outside China have argued that the campaign also serves to purge political rivals, though Beijing rejects that characterisation. The sentence was handed down on Monday, and the court confirmed that all illegal gains recovered so far have been turned over to the state.
| Atlantic / Anglosphere press | −0.20 | neutral |
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| Russian & CIS press | 0.00 | neutral |
| Indian & South Asian press | −0.50 | critical |
The death sentence is rare and shows China's determination to punish large-scale corruption.
The report focuses on the exceptional nature of the penalty and the amount of bribes, omitting the political context of the anti-corruption campaign, which suggests an independent but severe judicial system.
The report omits reference to Xi Jinping's anti-corruption campaign, which could make the sentence appear part of a political strategy.
The death sentence was issued for large-scale corruption, one of the most serious cases in China.
The news is reported in a purely factual manner, without commentary or political contextualization, making it appear objective.
The report omits the context of Xi Jinping's anti-corruption campaign, which could add a political dimension to the sentence.
The death sentence is part of Xi Jinping's anti-corruption campaign, which some critics accuse of targeting political opponents.
The report places the sentence in the political context of the anti-corruption campaign and cites criticism, suggesting the penalty may have political as well as judicial motivations.
The report omits the fact that the defendant pleaded guilty and expressed remorse, which could soften the perception of severity.
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