China Daily (Hong Kong)

Graft buster lists 50 fugitives

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s graft buster released an update on Wednesday on the possible whereabout­s of the country’s 50 most wanted corruption fugitives in other countries and regions and called for public participat­ion in repatriati­ng economic criminals.

The move followed the success of the disclosure of 22 fugitives’ whereabout­s last year, with six of them having surrendere­d themselves to justice in the Chinese mainland, according to the Fugitive Repatriati­on and Asset Recovery Office of the Central Anti-Corruption Coordinati­on Group.

The office said the updated list was released to engage the public in finding fugitives at large, and pledged to protect whistleblo­wers.

China has achieved “significan­t gradual success” in the hunt for fugitives since 2012,

Fact box

the office said.

From the beginning of the SkyNet operation in March 2015 to the end of April this year, a total of 4,141 fugitives suspected of economic crimes — including 825 corrupt officials — have returned to face trial from more than 90 countries and regions, it said.

In the same period, Chinese police retrieved nearly 10 billion yuan ($1.6 billion) in illicit assets, it said.

SkyNet is designed to target corruption fugitives and confiscate their ill-gotten assets.

The public was asked to report the whereabout­s of fugitives to the web address 12388.gov.cn/ztzz/.

Recently, many corrupt Chinese officials and Stateowned-enterprise executives have fled to the United States, Canada and New Zealand to evade punishment. China has no bilateral extraditio­n treaties with those countries.

In April 2015, the Internatio­nal Criminal Police Organizati­on issued red notices for the arrest of 100 major Chinese corruption fugitives on the run abroad. To date, 52 of the 100 most-wanted fugitives have returned from more than 16 countries and regions.

Probable locations of 50 wanted fugitives:

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