Former top officials with China Southern Airlines Group made their first 
appearance in court on Monday to face corruption charges that have seen them in 
detention since last year. 
The charges involve bribery and embezzlement of more than 1.2 billion yuan 
(US$151 million), Xinhua news agency cited prosecutors as saying at Guangzhou 
Intermediate People's Court. 
Former officials involved in the case include finance department director 
Chen Liming, vice general manager Peng Anfa, general manager Yan Zhiqing and Han 
Xiaojun, the Guangzhou branch director of Hantang Securities. 
The group is the parent of Guangzhou's New York-listed China Southern 
Airlines, the Chinese mainland's biggest air carrier in terms of fleet. The 
company is also listed in Shanghai and Hong Kong. 
Defendants Chen, Peng and Han were in the court. 
Prosecutors alleged Chen took bribes of 53.7 million yuan, stole company 
funds of 12.3 million yuan and embezzled 1.2 billion yuan from 2001 to last year 
through misconduct in a collective asset management business with Hantang 
Securities. 
About 300 million yuan of the embezzled funds was associated with former vice 
general manager Peng. The fund, which was illegally given to Han under 
permission from Peng's, had not been returned to the China Southern Airlines 
Group, prosecutors said. 
According to the charges, Chen, Peng and Yan conspired in August 2001 to 
embezzle the group's bank loans to invest in collective asset management 
businesses with fixed returns in the name of the group company. 
Yan allegedly authorized Chen to borrow from the bank and signed agreements 
with securities firms on the investments. Peng helped oversee the process, 
prosecutors said. 
Chen allegedly allocated 4.4 billion yuan for the transactions at Hantang 
Securities and Century Securities between August 2001 and June last year. 
Chen allegedly took a large number of bribes from the two securities firms in 
the name of "consulting fees," and stole proceeds from the investments. 
He was also charged with embezzling bank loans for personal or friends' use. 
Peng was personally involved in some of the cases, prosecutors said. 
The second court hearing was in two weeks, prosecutors said. 
In a statement last year, China Southern Airlines said the alleged misconduct 
was personal that had nothing to do with the company and would not influence its 
operations.