Chinese Democracy?

In China, when the temptations of capitalism lead to possible corruption, the government responds with a justice system that sounds, in the time of Bush, positively American:

Gome Electrical Appliances Holdings Ltd. is making inquiries into allegations against billionaire Chairman Huang Guangyu, China’s second-richest man, after media reports said he has been detained.
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Huang is the richest businessman reportedly probed by the Chinese government that in the past 12 months jailed at least three men who’ve appeared on lists of the nation’s wealthiest. The Communist Party, intent on ensuring economic growth, has cracked down on corruption via a judicial system criticized for holding suspects in secrecy and denying them access to legal representation.

“Cases like this aren’t unusual,” Kenny Tang, executive director of Redford Securities Co. in Hong Kong, said by phone today. “China is ruled by a Communist Party that adopted capitalist policies.
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Corruption costs China as much as $86 billion a year and is one of the most serious threats to its economic and political stability, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace said last year.

The United Nations said Nov. 21 it was concerned about China’s failure to bring detainees promptly before a judge, of prolonged police detention without charge, the absence of systematic registration for detainees and restricted access to lawyers and independent doctors.