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China sends billionaire tycoon to jail for ‘picking quarrels’

BEIJING, CHINA - OCTOBER 13: Sun Dawu, founder of Hebei Dawu Group, attends Peking University Entrepreneur Forum on October 13, 2005 in Beijing, China. (Photo by Zhang Ke/VCG via Getty Images)
Pig farming tycoon Sun Dawu has been outspoken about human rights and now faces 18 years in prison (Picture: Zhang Ke/VCG via Getty Images)

A Chinese pig farming tycoon has been sentenced to 18 years in prison for crimes including ‘picking quarrels’.

Sun Dawu, who runs one of China’s largest private agricultural businesses, is the latest in a string of corporate bosses to fall foul of the regime.

The 67-year-old billionaire is friend of political dissidents and has been outspoken about human rights.

After weeks of secret hearings, a court in Gaobeidian, near Beijing, found him guilty of ‘obstructing government workers’ and ‘picking quarrels and provoking trouble’ — catch-all charges often used against activists.

Other charges included illegally occupying farmland and assembling a crowd to attack state agencies. He was also fined £345,000.

Sun’s business, in the northern province of Hebei, employs 9,000 people in a purpose-built company town.

He was detained in November, along with 20 relatives and associates, over a land dispute with a state-run farm.

(FILES) This file photo taken on September 24, 2019 shows Chinese pig farmer and billionaire Sun Dawu posing at a feed warehouse in Hebei, outside Beijing. - A Chinese court sentenced agricultural tycoon Sun Dawu to 18 years in jail on July 28, 2021 for a catalogue of crimes including
Sun is in charge of one of the largest private agricultural businesses (Picture: Noel Celis/AFP via Getty Images)

At the time, he said dozens of his workers were injured in an incident with police.

At a pre-trial hearing Sun denied many of the accusations against him, describing himself as an ‘outstanding’ Communist Party member.

‘The way they’re investigating me is making those close to us suffer and those who hate us rejoice,’ he said.

China has been cracking down on businesses and entrepreneurs.

Major tech firms, such as Alibaba, Didi and Tencent, are being investigated for a range of regulatory issues.

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