News Corporation CEO Rupert Murdoch filed for divorce from his wife Wendi Deng just two weeks ago—she’s now been revealed as a top Chinese spy. She has connections to the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and its General Political Department (GPD).
On June 17, Pan-China Network cited insider news from Beijing that Deng was absorbed by the GDP of the Guangzhou branch in her freshman year of college to be trained as a spy in Hong Kong.
At that time, China had just regained control of Hong Kong from the U.K. The GPD was directly overseeing Phoenix Television, and also controlled Hong Kong newspapers by dominating shares. She easily got an internship and later became the only woman in top management.
According to Pan-China Network’s survey, Deng’s tuition source at Yale University is not clear. Her huge MBA tuition was provided by a friend who had been in contact with Deng for five years. But before that, he was not considered a wealthy man.
The Pan-China Network raises some questions: Why was it necessary for a Yale MBA student to cross the ocean to Hong Kong for an internship? The strangest thing was that she could afford a first class ticket in 1996, considering she was not a rich second-generation Chinese.
Tracing Deng’s activities when she first lived in the U.S. produced even more mysteries. Full story...
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On June 17, Pan-China Network cited insider news from Beijing that Deng was absorbed by the GDP of the Guangzhou branch in her freshman year of college to be trained as a spy in Hong Kong.
At that time, China had just regained control of Hong Kong from the U.K. The GPD was directly overseeing Phoenix Television, and also controlled Hong Kong newspapers by dominating shares. She easily got an internship and later became the only woman in top management.
According to Pan-China Network’s survey, Deng’s tuition source at Yale University is not clear. Her huge MBA tuition was provided by a friend who had been in contact with Deng for five years. But before that, he was not considered a wealthy man.
The Pan-China Network raises some questions: Why was it necessary for a Yale MBA student to cross the ocean to Hong Kong for an internship? The strangest thing was that she could afford a first class ticket in 1996, considering she was not a rich second-generation Chinese.
Tracing Deng’s activities when she first lived in the U.S. produced even more mysteries. Full story...
Related posts:
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