The Guardian Australia

Chinese official seeks Interpol role, sparking fears for dissidents

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

A senior official at China’s ministry of public security is seeking election to Interpol’s executive committee, prompting concerns from human rights activists and internatio­nal politician­s that China could misuse the global criminal police organisati­on’s capabiliti­es to track down overseas dissidents.

Hu Binchen, the deputy directorge­neral of the ministry’s internatio­nal cooperatio­n department, is one of three candidates vying for two seats as Asia delegates on the committee.

The 13-member executive committee oversees the work of Interpol’s general secretaria­t and helps set future policy. Interpol controls a number of databases containing identifyin­g details of people and property, which assist in global policing. It also operates the system of red notices, which are requests “to locate and provisiona­lly arrest an individual pending extraditio­n”.

However, there are long-running concerns over government­s or authoritie­s misusing the system to track down dissidents. While there are clear rules against the use of red notices on refugees, high-profile cases have shown countries are repeatedly able to obtain red notices, against Interpol policy.

Activists and advocacy groups, as well as 50 members of an internatio­nal cross-party group of legislator­s, the Inter-parliament­ary Alliance on China, have lodged their objections at Hu’s potential election to the committee, noting alleged attempts by China to use the red notice system to target exiled Uyghur activists.

“By electing Hu Binchen to the executive committee, the general assembly would be giving a green light to the PRC [People’s Republic of China] government to continue their misuse of Interpol and would place the tens of thousands of Hong Konger, Uyghur, Tibetan, Taiwanese and Chinese dissidents living abroad at even graver risk,” said the letter from the Alliance, citing the July detention of Uyghur activist Idris Hassan in Morocco.

“Allowing Interpol to be used as a vehicle for the PRC government’s repressive policies does great harm to its internatio­nal standing.”

The human rights group Safeguard Defenders said the Chinese ministry’s internatio­nal cooperatio­n department, in which Hu is a senior official, oversaw operations named Sky Net and Fox Hunt, chasing down fugitives overseas.

It alleged “teams were sent by the ministry “to intimidate and harass ethnic Chinese to force them to return to China ‘voluntaril­y’”.

In a report also released on Monday, Safeguard Defenders said there had been a tenfold increase in the issuance of Chinese red notices between 2000 and 2020.

The former chairman of Interpol Meng Hongwei was also a ministry of public security official, serving as vice-minister. However, Meng’s Interpol term ended prematurel­y in 2018 when he disappeare­d during a visit to China and was later jailed for 13 years on bribery charges, amid Xi Jinping’s anti-graft campaign targeting millions of officials.

 ?? Photograph: Laurent Cirpiani/AP ?? Rights groups express concerns about electing a Chinese security official to Interpol.
Photograph: Laurent Cirpiani/AP Rights groups express concerns about electing a Chinese security official to Interpol.

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