Latest Headlines
700 Odd Fugitives Are Brought Back Since April
  ·  2015-12-11  ·   Source:

More than 700 Chinese fugitives suspected of involvement in economic crimes have been brought home from abroad since April to stand trial, according to a senior anti-graft official.

The suspects include 96 government officials, the official said on the eve of World Anti-Corruption Day, which fell on December 9.

China launched a repatriation campaign code-named "Sky Net" in April targeting 100 key officials who had fled overseas.

In the past seven months, law enforcement officers have also confiscated 1.2 billion yuan ($189 million) in illegal assets, said Liu Jianchao, director of the International Cooperation Department under the Communist Party of China's Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.

He said the suspects were brought back from 68 countries and regions. About 300 of them were persuaded by law enforcement authorities to return and surrender. Others were either forcefully repatriated or sent back through extradition agreements.

Liu did not say how many of those brought back were among the 100 key officials targeted in the campaign.

Among those brought back, 48 were returned from the United States, 34 from Canada, 19 from Australia and one from the United Kingdom.

In the latest case, 64-year-old Huang Yurong, the former Party chief of the Henan Provincial Highway Administration, surrendered to police on December 6 and returned voluntarily from the United States 13 years after she fled China.

Law enforcement officers from China and the United States collaborated on the case--in which Huang is suspected of bribery--since the end of last year.

"No matter where the fugitives have fled, we are firmly resolved to capture them and bring them to justice," Liu said.

LiuDong, deputy direct or of the Economic Investigation Department under the Ministry of Public Security, said the United States, Canada and Australia have become popular destinations for suspected corrupt Chinese officials, due to legal differences and a lack of extradition treaties.

A number of suspected corrupt officials have transferred illegal assets worth millions of yuan to foreign accounts through money laundering and underground banks, he said.

Apart from the "Sky Net" campaign, the ministry has been working closely with the People's Bank of China to monitor the suspicious flow of funds remitted to foreign accounts. It is also enhancing supervision of offshore companies and cracking down on underground banks to prevent suspected corrupt officials from sending assets abroad illegally.

The ministry says that between April and the end of November, police smashed more than 150 underground banks and arrested about 300 suspects. They seized about 800 billion yuan in illegal funds.

Liu Jianchao said that nearly half of the fugitive officials are still on the run in countries including the United States, Canada and New Zealand.

"These countries are our priority, so we must beef up judicial cooperation with our counterparts there," he said.

He added that China has common interests with these countries in fighting corruption and safeguarding national interests.

These nations are "willing to help China to uncover more commercial bribery cases and refuse to offer safe havens for corrupt Chinese officials", Liu Jianchao said.

China and the United States have reached agreements on "some major cases", he said, adding that talks are underway between Chinese police authorities and their counterparts in Canada, Australia and New Zealand to hunt the fugitives.

"With enhanced judicial cooperation, the fugitives' happy days abroad will soon be gone," he said.

(China Daily  December 11, 2015)

China
Opinion
World
Business
Lifestyle
Video
Multimedia
 
China Focus
Documents
Special Reports
 
About Us
Contact Us
Advertise with Us
Subscribe
Partners: China.org.cn   |   China Today   |   China Pictorial   |   People's Daily Online   |   Women of China   |   Xinhua News Agency   |   China Daily
CGTN   |   China Tibet Online   |   China Radio International   |   Global Times   |   Qiushi Journal
Copyright Beijing Review All rights reserved 京ICP备08005356号 京公网安备110102005860