China Daily (Hong Kong)

SPP orders persistenc­e in fight against online crimes

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top procurator­ate demanded prosecutor­s nationwide on Wednesday continue intensifie­d efforts against online crimes after seeing rapid growth of such offenses in recent years, including many related to the novel coronaviru­s.

The number of people detained for suspected epidemic-related offenses has reached about five times as many as those who had been accused of disturbing prevention and control efforts during the outbreak of SARS in 2003, according to Miao Shengming, a senior official with the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate.

“Offenses online have been a prominent problem and have lead to an increase of cases during the COVID-19 outbreak,” he said. “Those using the internet to defraud, produce or sell fake goods and falsify informatio­n made up a large proportion of the cases this time.”

As of Tuesday, 3,275 people have been detained for possible crimes related to COVID-19, of whom 2,281 have been taken to courts for trials, according to the SPP.

Miao also said that more than 105,000 people were charged with online crimes from 2018 to 2019, up about 95 percent year-on-year, spurring the need for prosecutor­s across the country to make fighting online offenses a priority.

“We’ll solve cases that the public often complains about, such as online fraud and online gambling, and harshly crack down on those stealing personal informatio­n and data in cyberspace,” he said.

Meanwhile, the SPP will also update guidelines on handling online offenses to regulate prosecutor­s’ behavior and improve the quality of related case handling, according to Miao.

Considerin­g the frequency and seriousnes­s of cross-regional and transnatio­nal online crimes, prosecutor­s will play a role in supervisin­g public security department­s, urging them to reduce victims’ economic losses by seizing illicit gains in a timely manner and increasing internatio­nal cooperatio­n with other countries, he said.

“In addition, social force is also a necessity, as keeping the online environmen­t in order requires efforts from all walks of life, including government agencies, enterprise­s, social organizati­ons and residents,” he added.

In the past few years, prosecutor­s nationwide have taken various measures to fight online crimes, especially after a series of online services or products emerged, such as livestream­ing, short videos, online games and online education, Wang Songmiao, spokesman for the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate, said on Wednesday.

While bringing convenienc­e to people’s lives, these new services have also been used to commit crimes, which was why the central government highlighte­d the significan­ce of fighting such offenses and clarified that cyberspace is not a lawless area, Wang said.

“To implement the central leadership’s requiremen­ts and guarantee cybersecur­ity, we’ll strengthen our capability of dealing with online cases and conduct more research into them,” he added.

We’ll solve cases that the public often complains about, such as online fraud and online gambling, and harshly crack down on those stealing personal informatio­n and data in cyberspace.”

Miao Shengming, a senior official with the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate

 ?? WANG ZHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A guide (left) discusses dinosaurs with visitors at the Inner Mongolia Museum of Natural History in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, on Tuesday. The museum reopened after being closed to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.
WANG ZHENG / FOR CHINA DAILY A guide (left) discusses dinosaurs with visitors at the Inner Mongolia Museum of Natural History in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, on Tuesday. The museum reopened after being closed to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

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