A court in China's Shandong province gave former Bank of China chairman Liu Liange a suspended death sentence on Nov 26 for bribery and illegal loan issuance, state media reported.
He was sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve, the reports said, meaning the sentence will be carried out only if he commits further crimes during the period. If reprieved, he would have a life sentence.
Liu, born in 1961, had been working in banking and finance institutions, including in the People's Bank of China central bank and the Export-Import Bank of China, before he was promoted to become chairman of the Bank of China in 2019.
In October 2023, China’s ruling Communist Party expelled the former chairman, accusing him of illegal activities and taking bribes.
Reuters was not able to contact Liu for comment.
China’s anti-graft watchdog has in recent months launched a crackdown on the financial sector that has ensnared some of the country’s biggest names, including Liu and former deputy central bank governor Fan Yifei, who was sentenced to death in October for taking bribes, also with a two-year reprieve.
The court said that Liu took advantage of his position to seek promotions for many people and that the amount of bribes accepted was “particularly huge” at more than 121 million yuan (S$22.5 million), state broadcaster CCTV said.