China Daily (Hong Kong)

Smuggling suspect returned to China

Import scam used travelers to carry goods, police say

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

One of China’s most-wanted fugitives, suspected of smuggling ordinary goods valued at 438 million yuan ($65.7 million), was captured and returned from Indonesia to face trial, according to the General Administra­tion of Customs on Sunday.

Ji Wenhong, founder and former chief executive officer of online luxury retailer Shenzhen Zouxiu Network and Technology — branded as Xiu.com was arrested in the island province of Bali in early August and returned to China on Thursday after spending 15 months on the run in Indonesia.

An online statement on Sunday by Xiu confirmed that the third-party cross-border operation platform had been involved in smuggling, and that some individual­s in the company were under investigat­ion.

“We believe the judicial department­s will make a fair judgment,” the statement said; meanwhile, “all the company’s business is normal”.

“We have always had legal operations. We feel that giving back to society is our responsibi­lity, and we will adhere to that purpose in the future,” the statement said.

According to Gongbei customs in Guangdong, under Ji’s leadership Xiu transporte­d luxury clothing purchased in Europe and the United States to Hong Kong.

The goods were then sent to an employee of a logistics company, identified only as Wu, who hired travelers to carry the merchandis­e through customs inspection­s. The smuggled goods were then transporte­d to a Xiu company warehouse.

Xiu also offered false price informatio­n to an online retailer in Shenzhen and a logistics company in Guangdong, then smuggled the goods into China via express by declaring a low price and fabricatin­g other informatio­n, customs officials said.

According to the authoritie­s, imported goods were made to look like ordinary personal belongings, lowering the declared price below China’s 800 yuan threshold, to reduce fees.

The administra­tion said goods worth as much as 321 million yuan were handled by Xiu.com. Ji was also involved in other smuggling, it said.

When the operation was exposed, Ji fled the country on May 17 last year, a few days after being charged with smuggling ordinary goods.

In October, Interpol issued a red notice for Ji, and Indonesian police captured him on Bali island on Aug 4. Chinese anti-smuggling police escorted him to Xiamen airport on Aug 16.

Interpol issued red notices for the 100 most-wanted Chinese officials in April 2015. So far, more than 40 have returned from more than 16 countries and regions — including the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand — to stand trial.

Value of luxury goods that Ji Wenhong is suspected of smuggling into China

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China