China Daily

SPP commits to fighting rise in telecom fraud

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

Telecom fraud has become characteri­zed by group formation, industrial­ization and cross-border activities, with some large-scale criminal organizati­ons overseas operating under the guise of industrial and technology parks, a senior prosecutor from the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate said on Sunday.

What initially began as individual cases of fraud have escalated into severely violent offenses resulting in bodily harm and illegal detention, seriously compromisi­ng the safety and security of the general public, said Zhang Xiaojin, head of the SPP’s fourth procurator­ial office.

Zhang emphasized that both domestical­ly and internatio­nally, the criminal networks supporting overseas telecom fraud groups are becoming stronger, with more stable support in terms of personnel, informatio­n, technology and funds. Furthermor­e, the technologi­cal barriers for such crimes are being lowered, while the number of hidden funding channels has increased.

As the nation’s crackdown on telecom fraud intensifie­s, procurator­ial authoritie­s are witnessing a notable increase in the number of cases.

From January to November last year, national prosecutio­n authoritie­s filed charges against roughly 129,000 people accused of supporting informatio­n network crimes, up 13.2 percent year-on-year. Over 42,000 individual­s were suspected of being involved in telecom fraud, a 63.5 percent increase year-on-year.

Zhang noted common fraud activities include click farming — in which people are paid to click on links and generate likes on social media posts — investment and finance scams, shopping scams, impersonat­ions of customer service staff and false credit reporting. Among them, click farming and investment and finance scams accounted for more than half of all telecom fraud cases.

Procurator­ial authoritie­s have rigorously cracked down on telecom fraud and related crimes, suggesting harsh punishment for the offenders, he said. Last year, the SPP and the Ministry of Public Security oversaw the handling of five major cross-border telecom fraud cases, and transferre­d cases of fraud operated from northern Myanmar involving some 45,000 suspects to 28 provincial-level authoritie­s. The cases focused on investigat­ing fraud participan­ts, illicit funds and associated criminal networks.

“We are actively involved in asset recovery efforts, leveraging legal and criminal policies effectivel­y and supervisin­g the entire litigation process of the telecom fraud cases to facilitate the return of misappropr­iated funds and compensati­on. We are actively working to restore economic losses for the victims,” he said.

Procurator­ates at all levels also issued suggestion­s to address the deficienci­es of social governance reflected in telecom fraud and associated cases, intending to curb crimes at their inception, he said.

Internatio­nal cooperatio­n is also being strengthen­ed, with prosecutor­ial authoritie­s participat­ing in negotiatio­ns for the United Nations convention against cybercrime, aiming to unite the internatio­nal community to tackle the problem.

 ?? YIN GANG / XINHUA ?? Ten major crime suspects, including six suspected of orchestrat­ing telecom fraud against Chinese people from northern Myanmar, are escorted to Kunming, Yunnan province, on Jan 30, after being returned to China by Myanmar police.
YIN GANG / XINHUA Ten major crime suspects, including six suspected of orchestrat­ing telecom fraud against Chinese people from northern Myanmar, are escorted to Kunming, Yunnan province, on Jan 30, after being returned to China by Myanmar police.

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