A friend journalist said that Song was "no threat to society", but the raster highlights the governments skittishness about the trial.
Despite his spectacular fall from grace along his wife Guy Ku Lai, who was found guilty of the murder of British businessman Neil Heywood, Bo still has his supporters thanks to his extensive reforms and public housing projects in Chongqing. Writing on his microblog account, Song said that "All members of the Chinese Communist Party should rise up together to oppose the illegal trial in Jinan." Any inflammatory messages have been purged from Sina's servers, but have been archived on an anti censorship site, freeweibo.com.
Bo is almost certain to be found guilty at the end of the trial, and state media have been running thundering editorials in order to rally support behind the government. The case has been neatly turned around from an exposé of how the country's political elite abuse power and hoard millions into a flagship example of the Communist Party's anti-corruption crackdown.
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