Sacked Shanxi mayor linked to China Resources Power mine acquisitions
Firm recruited Shanxi official who lost job for failing to close illegal pits
A former mayor in Shanxi, who was sacked for failing to curtail illegal mining operations in his city, has turned out to be a key figure in helping China Resources to make inroads in the coal-rich province.
Yan, as legal representative of a joint venture led by China Resources Power's coal unit, Taiyuan China Resources Coal (CR Taiyuan), signed a transfer agreement with Shanxi Jinye Group (Jinye) in August last year in which Jinye transferred mining rights of the Hongyatou coal mine to CR Taiyuan, according to a mandatory public notice of the contract issued by the provincial land and resources bureau.
The agreement consummated part of a 2010 deal, of which two mainland journalists alleged improprieties on their Sina Weibo accounts last year. They accused China Resources Holdings' former chairman Song of orchestrating the company's alleged overpayment for Jinye's coal-related assets.
Song was chairman of CRP from late 2003, when the firm was listed, until July 2010, a few months after the deal was signed.
Yan, together with his deputy mayor in Fenyang, was removed from office in 2008 after the provincial commission for discipline inspection found over 60 illegal coal mining operations in his jurisdiction, China News Service reported in October 2008.
Media coverage has cast light on Yan's long connection to Xing Libin, chairman of Shanxi's largest privately owned coal miner - the firm reportedly responsible for introducing Song to the owner of Jinye.