Bo Xilai's wife Gu Kailai and the man she is accused of murdering Nick Heywood
By Associated Press,
Updated: Wednesday, July 18, 2012
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — A French
citizen detained last month in Cambodia for alleged links to an
explosive Chinese political scandal was freed and flew to China
voluntarily to help its investigation, Cambodian officials said
Wednesday.
Police released Patrick Devillers in Phnom Penh on Tuesday
after China formally requested it. Cambodian Interior Ministry spokesman
Khieu Sopheak said Beijing had assured the Frenchman he would be
allowed to leave China within 60 days.
Cambodian authorities detained Devillers on June 13 for possible
links to the death in China last November of British businessman Neil
Heywood, but he has not been charged with any crime. Heywood had close
ties to Bo Xilai, a Chinese political high-flier who was ousted as
Communist Party chief of Chongqing city earlier this year.
China
had asked Cambodia to arrest Devillers so he could be interrogated and
sought his extradition. But Cambodian officials said they would not hand
him over unless they obtained proof of wrongdoing.
Cambodian
government spokesman Khieu Kanharith said Beijing gave Devillers
assurances he would be allowed to leave China within two months if he
promised to help Chinese investigators. After his release, he
voluntarily boarded a plane to China on Tuesday night, Kanharith said.
Sopheak said Devillers would not have gone if he had been “facing imprisonment” in China.
Beijing did not report his arrival or comment on its investigation.
Bo,
the politician, fell from power after his former police chief and
longtime aide fled to a U.S. consulate and divulged suspicions that Bo’s
wife, Gu Kailai, was involved in Heywood’s death.
Bo was
subsequently removed as Chongqing party secretary in March and then
suspended as a Politburo member amid speculation he tried to quash an
investigation of his wife and a household employee over the Briton’s
death. And the former police chief, Wang Lijun, resigned from the
national legislature last month — a sign that he might be a step closer
to formal arrest and trial.
Though authorities in China initially
said Heywood died from either excess drinking or a heart attack, they
have since named Gu as a suspect.
News reports have said that
Devillers, an architect, was closely linked to Bo, Gu and Heywood, and
had helped Bo rebuild the northeastern Chinese city of Dalian when Bo
was the city’s mayor in the 1990s.
China has considerable influence in Cambodia, having provided millions of dollars in aid over the past decade.
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