Neil Heywood was found dead in a hotel room in the southwestern Chinese mega-city of Chongqing in November 2011. Bo's wife Gu Kailai was convicted of the murder while the former political star's own trial ruled he acted to suppress a probe into the killing.
Heywood had been close to Bo and his family, but Gu's 2012 trial heard that she and the businessman had fallen out after a deal went sour.
In a statement to The Wall Street Journal yesterday, Heywood's mother Ann said she had been assured by Chinese authorities that she and her family had a right to compensation, but had not received anything.
Authorities had told her she could seek compensation in Chinese courts. "This is absurd," she said.
"As is well known, China does not enjoy the rule of law: the Chinese courts and the whole legal process are controlled by the Communist Party."
"But I would like to point out that China is a country governed by the rule of law," Hua said.
Personal injury was a civil matter, she added, and the parties could reach a settlement between themselves or file an action in court.
In her statement, Heywood questioned whether Beijing's "inertia and evasiveness" might be related to "factional or personal struggles" or Gu's relationships "with past and present members of the Chinese leadership".
Her son's murder and Chinese authorities' subsequent conduct were "a stain on the reputation of a great country and provide chilling evidence of the dangers of doing business in today's China," she added.
"When, years later, the friendship sours, she murders the businessman by poisoning. Her husband, the cabinet minister, assisted by the commissioner of the Metropolitan Police and a number of his senior deputies, conspires to cover up the murder.
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