Global Times

Anti-graft watchdog releases info on 50 fugitives

- By Liu Xin

China’s top anti-graft watchdog released detailed informatio­n on 50 fugitives who allegedly engaged in corrupt acts or economic crimes, with 23 of them hiding in the US.

The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) provided a list of 50 fugitives on its website on Wednesday, including their names, photos, identifica­tion and passport numbers, when they fled abroad, alleged offenses and possible whereabout­s.

Most of the fugitives are suspected of embezzleme­nt, corruption and fraud. Twentythre­e fugitives are hiding in the US, 11 in Canada, six in Australia, two in Hong Kong, one in

Singapore, one in Vietnam, one in Thailand and one in the UK, the CCDI release said.

“The CCDI list proves that China’s anticorrup­tion authoritie­s have acquired the necessary informatio­n to hunt down these fugitives,” Zhuang Deshui, deputy director at Peking University’s Research Center for Government Integrity-Building, told the Global Times on Thursday.

The detailed list could also encourage foreigners and overseas Chinese to monitor the fugitives’ behavior and convince them to return to China, Zhuang said.

But experts said it’s not that simple to retrieve these fugitives, because China has yet to sign extraditio­n treaties with some of the countries, and a number of fugitives have acquired foreign citizenshi­p.

Among the 50 listed on Wednesday, 21 have been on the run for more than 10 years. For example, He Yejun, former chairman of Tangshan Haomen Group Company, has been in hiding in the US since 1999. Suspected of misappropr­iating public funds, He Yejun fled to the US on May 23, 1999. The CCDI said he could be living in Florida.

According to a May 2015 New York Times report, He Yejun managed to get US citizenshi­p and changed his name to Chen Wei.

Huang Feng, director of the Institute for Internatio­nal Criminal Law with the Beijing Normal University, previously told the Global Times that officials from the fugitives’ hometowns should be encouraged to provide evidence and other materials needed for the fugitives to be deported.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying told a daily briefing on Thursday that fugitive repatriati­on and asset recovery work is an important part of China’s anti-corruption campaign and diplomatic work.

China has entered into 79 criminal judicial assistance treaties with 61 countries, and has signed extraditio­n treaties with 50 countries, Hua said.

Tightening the noose

A central anti-corruption coordinati­on group office in charge of fugitive repatriati­on and asset recovery also released the same list with a notice on Wednesday, calling on Chinese citizens and overseas Chinese to provide informatio­n on the whereabout­s of the fugitives and cooperate with authoritie­s to persuade them to return to China.

This is the second time that the office has released such informatio­n in a statement. In April 2017, it released informatio­n on 22 fugitives listed on an Interpol red notice of 100 suspects, and has since received a number of reports on the fugitives from domestic and overseas informants. Six fugitives have surrendere­d so far.

Zhuang said China is hunting down fugitives hiding overseas and busting corrupt domestic officials to strengthen the anti-corruption campaign.

“China has establishe­d a mechanism to block corrupt officials from escaping, which has led to fewer fugitives in recent years. Government­s are more carefully scrutinizi­ng passports of officials and their whereabout­s. And customs and bank authoritie­s are working together to put on hold the bank accounts of officials who intend to flee abroad,” Zhuang said.

China’s “Sky Net” operations have led to the arrest of 4,141 fugitives from over 90 countries and regions, and recovered nearly 10 billion yuan ($1.56 billion) as of the end of April. Among them, 825 were state functionar­ies and 52 were on the Interpol red notice, the CCDI said.

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