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World Bank meeting with Christy Clark present. |
British Columbia Premier Christy Clark (fifth person from the left in photo on left) was in
Washington, D.C., on April 17 meeting leaders of the
IMF, World Bank Group where she bragged about the
British Columbia Government financial position that was increased by the corrupt acquisition of the
English family property at
Pacific Rim Resort through a corrupt legal process where buyers and financiers were frightened away by
acts of terrorism, such as the deliberate burning of the
English family home shown burning in the photo on right below, threats of murder and attempted murder.
All the available evidence points to a deliberate attack against the
English family carried out by
agents of the Government of British Columbia who used criminal methods to loot a very valuable property that had been owned by the
English family for almost 3 decades. This is the legacy that
Premier Christy Clark is building for herself.
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The English home burning. |
Premier Christy Clark also had a private meeting at the
White House with
Roberta Jacobson, who has been the
United States Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs since March 30, 2012 and who is extremely curious about the
British Columbia Government's close relationship
Li Ka-shing who is widely regarded as an agent of the Chinese Communist Party and who recently announced that he had hired former
Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird who, it is now suspected, was a secret agent of the
Chinese Communist Party working inside
Stephen Harper's cabinet for the past eight years - since 2007.
The
Li Ka shing business enterprise has huge interests in
Canada’s largest housing and commercial property development, the massive
False Creek project in central
Vancouver on the government land that hosted Expo ’86.
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Premier Christy Clark and Li Ka-shing |
The project covers 204 acres, 82.5 hectares — one-sixth of downtown
Vancouver and there are persistent rumours that bribes were paid when
Li Ka Shing acquired the valuable government property.
Li Ka-shing appears to be in deep trouble with the
Communist Party in
China where crooked billionaires are being sent to jail and, in some cases, executed. Corroboration of this theory is found in the fact that
Li Ka-shing has moved his corporate head office from Hong Kong to the Cayman Islands.
The
Chinese Communist Party’s most authoritative mouthpiece, the
People’s Daily, has pronounced that
Li is “no longer an ideal role model” for aspiring Chinese entrepreneurs. Other state-controlled media outlets have even labelled
Li a
“big tiger,” a code term used in
President Xi Jinping’s continuing
anti-graft campaign to describe high officials and
business people tainted by corruption.
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