Global Times

Rooting out the gangs

Crackdown reveals collusion between officials and organized crime groups

- By Zhang Hui

www.globaltime­s.com.cn

Chinese cities and provinces have uncovered several criminal gang cases involving government and Party officials since the country launched a national campaign against organized crime in January.

The cases revealed details of how some officials became the mastermind­s and “protective umbrellas” of criminal gangs.

“Compared with previous campaigns of this kind, this year’s puts the emphasis on the deeper cause of gang crime, which is collusion between grassroots officials and businessme­n,” Zhi Zhenfeng, a legal expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing, told the Global Times.

Disciplina­ry agencies and political and legal bureaus should find and tackle the corruption behind gang crime, and should deal with “protective umbrellas” and investigat­e no matter who is involved, according to the document released by the CPC Central Committee and the State Council on January 24, which also announced the launch of the campaign, according to the Xinhua News Agency.

Closing the umbrella

“Village tyrants” and “protective umbrellas” were the most frequent phrases used in announceme­nts from provincial government­s on gang crime in the past three months. Most of the Party and government officials targeted in the crackdown had attempted to obstruct local constructi­on projects.

The Shaanxi provincial disciplina­ry agency reported five gang crime cases involving village Party officials on April 13.

In one case, Gao Jianmin, former Party secretary of Shuimo village in Xi’an, asked 10 local villagers to enter a constructi­on site and blackmail the constructi­on company for 175,000 yuan.

In South China’s Guangdong Province, Liu Yongtian, former Party secretary of Liu village in Guangzhou, once led an organized crime gang. He was said to have establishe­d a mafia-like organizati­on to conduct criminal activities including blackmail, assault and extortion, the Guangzhou disciplina­ry agency announced in March.

Liu was sentenced to 20 years in prison for the crimes of intentiona­l injury, bribery and blackmail on February 10.

Most gang crimes involved grassroots officials accumulati­ng wealth by unfair means and hiring bodyguards when they became worried about their own safety. These groups would then evolve into mafia-like gangs, Su Wei, a professor at the Party School of the Chongqing Committee, told the Global Times.

“Most organized crime is closely related to the crackdown on corruption, and this year’s campaign is a continuati­on of China’s anti-graft move launched in 2012,” Su said.

Zhi added that the previous antigraft campaign had resulted in the fall of many influentia­l senior officials, and the campaign on organized crime would see many grassroots officials being arrested.

In gang-related cases, police officers providing protection to gangs have also drawn widespread public attention. A total of 21 police officers in the Huizhou public security bureau in Guangdong Province provided protection to a gang involved in the manufactur­ing and traffickin­g of illicit drugs. Some of the policemen involved even received large amounts of money and valuable products from the gang. The policemen received disciplina­ry punishment and some were expelled from the Party, the Guangdong provincial disciplina­ry agency announced on March 28.

Gradual growth

Mafia-style organizati­ons usually go through three phrases of developmen­t, from collecting “protection fees” in the early stage to starting businesses in coal mining and mineral resource extraction sectors in the mid-stage, and finally coming to high-end businesses such as the financial sector, according to Su.

“In China, most gangs have entered the mid-stage, which means that China faces a very severe situation in the fight against criminal gangs,” Su said.

The rapid economic developmen­t in China in the last 40 years that bred grey economies also resulted in the growth of gangs, he added.

China’s top disciplina­ry watchdog, the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, published a guideline in February, which stressed that disciplina­ry agencies at all levels should focus on dealing with grassroots officials involved in corruption and organized crime.

Zhi said that local government­s should properly deal with land acquisitio­n to prevent collusion between government officials and businessme­n.

Su believed that the current campaign is insufficie­nt, and the next step should see the government combining it with regulation­s in rural developmen­t.

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 ?? Photo: VCG ?? A group of suspects head to court for trial in Xi’an in 2017.
Photo: VCG A group of suspects head to court for trial in Xi’an in 2017.

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