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US News

Wild online rumors of political turbulence put China on edge

BEIJING — China’s social-media services, which had allowed wide discussion of controversial politician Bo Xilai since his ouster last week, are cracking down on searches for his name, as his downfall seems to have put much of the country on edge and given rise to fevered rumors of political infighting.

On Monday night, internet users were startled by reports — entirely unsubstantiated — on China’s wildly popular Twitter-like microblogging sites of gunfire in downtown Beijing. Nerves were further jangled by accounts of a heavier than usual police presence along Chang’an Avenue, one of the capital’s main thoroughfares.

Among the legion of social-media fanatics, there has been fevered chatter of a political struggle inside the towering walls of the Zhongnanhai leadership compound in downtown Beijing.

One theory, widely explored: A battle is brewing between Zhou Yongkang — the country’s domestic security chief, who is believed to be a strong supporter of Bo — and President Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao and other leaders who analysts say likely supported Bo’s ouster. Zhou is a member of the party’s all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee and one of the country’s nine most powerful political leaders.

The Communist Party’s grip on power depends in large part on maintaining a facade of unity, so the online rumor mill is unsettling China’s propaganda officials and their armies of internet censors. That is particularly true in the run-up to a once-a-decade leadership change scheduled to take place later this year.

Rumors of a power struggle also appeared to unsettle markets — credit default swaps on China’s government debt — which offer a sort of insurance if China is unable to pay back its obligations — briefly rose Tuesday before falling back to previous levels, according to a trader.

On Wednesday, Beijing appeared outwardly calm, though rumors continued to spin around overseas Chinese-language news websites, including that of the Epoch Times, a New York-based news organization with ties to the Falun Gong spiritual group, which is banned in China.

Bo was dumped last week after a scandal involving his former police chief, Wang Lijun, who apparently sought asylum in the US consulate in nearby Chengdu. Bo was a populist politician who grabbed national headlines with a high-profile crackdown on organized crime and attempts to revive the singing of Mao-era revolutionary songs.

To read more, go to The Wall Street Journal.