Wu, a former member of the South Korean group EXO, has been detained since August 2021 for allegedly luring young girls for sex.
“According to the facts, the nature, circumstances and harmful consequences of the crime, the court made the above judgment,” the court said in an online statement.Article contentWu was also slapped with a fine of 600 million yuan for evading taxes by massively underreporting his earnings from performances, advertisements and other sources of income.
Wu has been detained since August 2021 while police conducted an investigation in response to comments online that he “repeatedly lured young women” to have sex, according to a police statement at that time.
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China sentences Chinese-Canadian star Kris Wu to 13 yearsA Chinese court on Friday sentenced Chinese-Canadian pop star Kris Wu to 13 years in prison on charges including rape.
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China sentences Chinese-Canadian star Kris Wu to 13 yearsA Chinese court on Friday sentenced Chinese-Canadian pop star Kris Wu to 13 years in prison on charges including rape.
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Chinese-Canadian star Kris Wu given 13 years in Beijing prison on various charges | Globalnews.caKris Wu has been detained since August 2021 while police conducted an investigation in response to comments online that he “repeatedly lured young women” to have sex.
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Reaction to Trudeau-Xi exchange shows partisanship trumps all, even our national interestOTTAWA—The responses to Chinese President Xi Jinping’s high-handed outburst toward Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at the G20 summit say it all about politics in 2022. Rather than see it for what it really was—a bullying complaint from Xi about letting the world know what the two men discussed in a brief meeting earlier at the summit—right-wing media, politicians, and commentators couldn’t resist the opportunity to portray Canada’s leader as weak and chastened. Britain’s Daily Mail bleated “President Xi humiliates” Trudeau, whom the paper described as “increasingly awkward-looking” as he withstood the rant caught on video. According to the Washington Times, Canada’s prime minister was “dressed down” by his Chinese counterpart. Canadian media couldn’t seem to cope with the unusual pyrotechnics. CTV News, for instance, quoted a former Canadian ambassador to China saying it shows Xi views Canada and Trudeau as small-time and unimportant. Then it had a think-tank executive saying it all demonstrated the Chinese leader’s disrespect for the prime minister. Conservatives echoed Xi’s meaningless allegation that Trudeau had “leaked” details about the two men’s discussion, and former Conservative MP Bob Saroya tweeted, “Politics aside it is tough to see the PM run backstage after getting publicly humiliated by President Xi.” The readiness to take the side of a dictator in a dispute with Canada’s prime minister is an indication of how partisan dislike for Trudeau, the Liberals, and anything progressive has reached the point where it tops everything—even our national interest—in today’s vicious, divisive political climate. These Trudeau critics seem to have forgotten that the Chinese government is seen by many security experts as the most serious threat to the democratic, rules-based global order. Xi is the leader of the autocratic forces working to chip away at western democratic ideas, and probably bears a great deal of responsibility for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. It seems
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Justin Trudeau elaborates on what Chinese ‘interference’ he discussed with Xi Jinping at G20 summitDuring Question Period, Prime Minister Trudeau said his government has known for years about ‘consistent engagements’ by Chinese government representatives in Canadian communities and with local media
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Canadian workers say they face barriers amid growing union push at Starbucks - BNN BloombergUnionization among Canadian Starbucks employees is starting to gain traction, organizers say, but much like their U.S. counterparts, workers face barriers and alleged anti-union activity by the coffee giant.
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