这些是中国的名人吧?

wikilala

知名会员
注册
2010-08-28
消息
342
荣誉分数
62
声望点数
138
http://www.cbc.ca/beta/news/opinion/dinner-with-prime-minister-1.3868535
78626c2e9ec08392543877f4ca5e6b1b.jpg
 
Trudeau attended cash-for-access fundraiser with Chinese billionaires
ROBERT FIFE AND STEVEN CHASE
OTTAWA — The Globe and Mail
Published Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2016 5:00AM EST
Last updated Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2016 12:37PM EST

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was the top draw at a $1,500 Liberal Party cash-for-access fundraiser at the mansion of a wealthy Chinese-Canadian business executive in May. One of the guests at the event was a well-heeled donor who was seeking Ottawa’s final approval to begin operating a new bank aimed at Canada’s Chinese community.

The Globe and Mail has learned that wealthy Chinese businessman Zhang Bin who, with a partner, donated $1-million to the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation and the University of Montreal Faculty of Law weeks after the fundraiser, also attended the event. Mr. Zhang is a political adviser to the Chinese government in Beijing and a senior apparatchik in the network of Chinese state promotional activities around the world.

Chinese Business Chamber of Commerce chair Benson Wong played host to Mr. Trudeau and 32 other people at his Toronto home. Among the donors was insurance tycoon Shenglin Xian, the founder of Wealth One Bank of Canada, and several Chinese billionaires.

At the time, Mr. Xian, president of Toronto-based Shenglin Financial Group Inc., was waiting for final approval from federal bank regulators for his Schedule 1 bank to start business in Canada. Schedule 1 banks are domestic, not foreign, and authorized to accept deposits in Canada.

Attending the fundraiser appears to breach the ethical rules laid down by Mr. Trudeau after he took office. These “Open and Accountable Government” rules state “there should be no preferential access, or appearance of preferential access” in exchange for political donations.

The fundraiser also appears to violate Liberal Party guidelines that require party officials to ban anyone from attending a fundraiser if they have direct business interests before the government.

The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI), which reports to Parliament through Finance Minister Bill Morneau, gave the final okay for Wealth One to launch as a federally chartered domestic bank on July 19 with online banking services supported by offices in Toronto and Vancouver.

Canada’s banking watchdog assesses applications for new banks in a multistage process that includes consultation with the Finance Department.

Liberal Party spokesman Braeden Caley played down the presence of Mr. Xian at the elite Trudeau fundraiser, and maintained Wealth One’s application was not discussed.

“As we have been clear, fundraising events are partisan functions where there is not discussion of official government business. Any individual who wishes to initiate a discussion on such matters is immediately redirected to instead make an appointment with the relevant office,” Mr. Caley said in an e-mail to The Globe. “As a political party, the Liberal Party of Canada is not aware of proposals to government – and any such information sharing would be inappropriate.”

Mr. Caley referred The Globe to an official in Mr. Morneau’s office. The official said Wealth One got tentative approval with letters of patent from Conservative finance minister Joe Oliver on July 22, 2015. OSFI did not seek or require Mr. Morneau’s July 19, 2016, approval, the official said.

Mr. Xian, who emigrated from China to Canada in 1990 and quickly became one of the country’s top insurance agents, did not respond to repeated attempts from The Globe for comment.

NDP MP Charlie Angus said the Prime Minister had “really stepped over the line” and “set a low bar” by attending the private fundraiser.

“I find this particular case very troubling because this is a person who has a direct financial interest, paid money, had access to the Prime Minister and whether business was discussed is beside the point,” Mr. Angus told The Globe.

Just weeks after the May fundraiser, the Trudeau Foundation and the university announced that Mr. Zhang, who is also president of the China Cultural Industry Association, and another wealthy Chinese businessman, Niu Gensheng, would donate $1-million to the University of Montreal and the Trudeau Foundation “to honour the memory and leadership” of the former prime minister, who opened diplomatic relations with China in 1970. Of the $1-million endowment, $200,000 went to the Trudeau Foundation, $50,000 will pay for the statue of the elder Mr. Trudeau, and $750,000 will fund University of Montreal Faculty of Law scholarships, which include grants for Quebec students to visit China.

The China Cultural Industry Association, which is supervised and regulated by two Chinese state ministries, aims to build international ties for Beijing.

There is no evidence Mr. Zhang paid to attend the fundraiser, and as a foreign citizen, he cannot make federal political donations. Mr. Niu was not at the event.

Another Chinese billionaire, Ted Jiancheng Zhou, a real estate developer who now lives in Canada, also paid $1,500 to attend the private Trudeau event, as did Jenny Qi, a movie actress, real estate investor and president of the Canada Confederation of Shenzhen Associations. Bob Guo, the chief executive officer of Goldenmount Capital International, was at the fundraiser, but The Globe was unable to determine if he paid the $1,500-per-person ticket price.

Photographs from the May 19 fundraiser in Mr. Wong’s home show Mr. Trudeau speaking to the group with Canadian and Chinese flags in the background. Among the guests was Liu Meng, chairman of the Yangtze River International Chamber of Commerce, which is opening a branch in Canada.

Mr. Liu, a member of China’s Communist Party, has been praised by China’s state media for “seeking out overseas delegates for future business co-operation … and to invest abroad and expand into the global market.”

A photo of Mr. Liu beside the Prime Minister appeared in the Yangtze River Network, a Chinese-run government media outlet based in Wuhan. The Liberal Party said Mr. Liu did not make any personal donations.

“It is our understanding that Liu Meng attended as a friend and guest of the volunteer in whose home the event was hosted, and that he made no political contribution in association with his attendance that evening,” Mr. Caley said.

Mr. Trudeau was also photographed with Xiangton Zhao, a multimillionaire from China focused on property investment and development. There is no record of Mr. Zhao making a donation.

Some of the investors in Wealth One have close ties to China’s Communist regime, including bank director Yuansheng Ou Yang, an owner of a string of Yuan Ming supermarkets in Canada and businesses in China’s Fujian province.

His biography on the Wealth One website says that before he immigrated to Canada in 1990, Mr. Ou Yang was a member of the National People’s Congress, which is China’s legislature, and the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, a political advisory board for China’s leaders.

Another director is Mao Hua Chen, a wealthy Vancouver real estate developer, who along with his wife, Mingyan Lin, are listed as key investors in Wealth One. The couple also operate the North America Investment and Trade Promotion Association, which pushes for close economic ties between Canada, China and the United States.

The Prime Minister has come under fire for cash-for-access fundraisers at homes or hotels where Canadians pay up to $1,525 to rub shoulders with Liberal ministers in charge of major spending and policy decisions.

Last Tuesday, Liberal MPs voted down a Conservative Party motion backed by the New Democrats that would have transferred the Open and Accountable rules on lobbying and fundraising to Ethics Commissioner Mary Dawson. This would have given Ms. Dawson’s office the legal power to crack down on such events.

Ms. Dawson has called the cash-for-access system “not very savoury,” while federal Lobbying Commissioner Karen Shepherd has launched an investigation into the practice after Globe articles revealed that business executives with financial interests before the government were buying tickets to attend events with senior ministers.

“During their first year in office, the Liberals have held more than 80 cash-for-access fundraising events featuring lobbyists, lawyers and important stakeholder groups currently doing business with the Government of Canada,” Conservative MP Blaine Calkins said.

The Liberal Party said in a Nov. 4 letter to all cabinet ministers and parliamentary secretaries that it takes stringent steps to weed people out of fundraisers if they have direct business dealings with the government.
 
这位咸巴菲有手段,一百万加币买个加拿大国内一类银行的许可证,这一百万都用到人情“正道”上了,加拿大政府一分没得到,缜密,滴水不漏!

Logo$v@201611260105.png
 
他们的盘子很漂亮,我看到COSTCO有卖的,英国的著名品牌,经典的花。
但是怎么放的呢?既不是西餐的规矩,也不是中餐的规矩,不中不西。
土豆坐的地方,可能只能吃1-2个菜。
菜摆放得也很无厘头。
 
最后编辑:
多伦多已经有两间分行了,货真价实的华人企业家,牛人!将来渥村的分行也会开张?
这位咸巴菲有手段,一百万加币买个加拿大国内一类银行的许可证,这一百万都用到人情“正道”上了,加拿大政府一分没得到,缜密,滴水不漏!

Logo$v@201611260105.png
 
他们的盘子很漂亮,我看到COSTCO有卖的,英国的著名品牌,经典的花。
但是怎么放的呢?既不是西餐的规矩,也不是中餐的规矩,不中不西。
土豆坐的地方,可能只能吃1-2个菜。
菜摆放得也很无厘头。
没有公筷公勺。估计土豆也就喝杯啤酒。一个个西装领带的,估计就是个应酬,回去还得吃点方便面。
 
多伦多已经有两间分行了,货真价实的华人企业家,牛人!将来渥村的分行也会开张?
你是说都是靠贿赂特路多给他的基金会捐钱开的张? 不会这么手眼通天吧?:evil:
 
这位咸巴菲有手段,一百万加币买个加拿大国内一类银行的许可证,这一百万都用到人情“正道”上了,加拿大政府一分没得到,缜密,滴水不漏!

Logo$v@201611260105.png
咸补肥有手段?这手段是不是猪手切成段了?
 
没有公筷公勺。估计土豆也就喝杯啤酒。一个个西装领带的,估计就是个应酬,回去还得吃点方便面。
蛮有经验的。
 
都不是名人,有钱而已!
 
没有公筷公勺。估计土豆也就喝杯啤酒。一个个西装领带的,估计就是个应酬,回去还得吃点方便面。
在这个咸老板家宴上敲定,那个叫张斌的中国人(后来扒出为中国政府工作),给特路多基金会捐款100万加元,其中包括建造老特路多塑像一枚。收这么大礼小特路多不会太敷衍的,怎么也得巴拉几下菜吧!:evil:
 
他们的盘子很漂亮,我看到COSTCO有卖的,英国的著名品牌,经典的花。
但是怎么放的呢?既不是西餐的规矩,也不是中餐的规矩,不中不西。
土豆坐的地方,可能只能吃1-2个菜。
菜摆放得也很无厘头。
土豆是不是吃那个菜都是问题。。。您看见有公筷吗?那位女士拿个刀叉可是自己的,那架势就是直接去盘子里弄菜了,谁还敢吃?互相都不熟悉,口水互相吃?
 
后退
顶部