China Daily

Corrupt officials finding it harder to escape abroad

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

The number of corrupt officials who have escaped overseas has declined sharply amid an intensifie­d anti-graft drive, a senior official said on Monday.

Since 2014, the number of newly identified corrupt officials who have fled China has fallen annually, said Liu Jianchao, director of the Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Bureau under the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.

In 2016, 19 corrupt officials escaped abroad to avoid legal punishment, decreasing by 81 percent compared with 101 in 2014, according to CCDI.

“Tightened management of the officials’ passports and measures adopted to prevent the suspects from leaving the country all contribute­d to the sharp decline of the newly added fugitives,” said Huang Feng, a law professor at Beijing Normal University.

China also has enhanced law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n with other countries, improving the success rate in returning fugitives from overseas to face trial, which also serves as a deterrent, he said.

Between early 2014 and the end of 2016, Chinese judicial officers had returned 2,566 corrupt fugitives from more than 70 countries and regions, including the United States, Canada and Singapore, according to the CCDI. They also confiscate­d 8.64 billion yuan ($1.25 billion) in illegal assets.

A large number of corrupt Chinese officials have escaped to countries such as the United States, partly because of the lack of a bilateral extraditio­n treaty and difference­s in their legal systems. Such officials transferre­d billions of yuan in illicit assets to foreign

accounts through money laundering or undergroun­d banks.

Since April 2015, when Interpol issued red notices for the capture of the 100 mostwanted Chinese corrupt officials, 37 have been returned from more than 16 countries and regions. Half of the rest are still at large in the US and Canada.

Liu said they will improve judicial cooperatio­n, including intelligen­ce sharing and joint investigat­ion, with their counterpar­ts, especially in Western countries. They also will conduct more case by case negotiatio­ns with US judicial authoritie­s on important cases.

He said they also will work on collecting solid evidence in China on the fugitives to offer their counterpar­ts as much informatio­n as possible — including the suspects’ location and how assets were moved and where they are — when they request foreign judicial assistance in arresting the fugitives and confiscati­ng their dirty money.

China will conduct a new round of its multiagenc­y Skynet campaign against the fugitives in March or April, according to CCDI.

“No matter who is involved and wherever they flee, we will make every effort to bring them back to face justice,” Liu added.

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