China Daily

Crackdown on telecom fraud bears fruit, says chief of top procurator­ate

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

An integrated approach will be adopted combining measures to combat, prevent and control telecommun­ications fraud and related crimes and promote comprehens­ive governance of the telecom network, as the situation regarding such crimes remains complex, said China’s procurator-general.

“Telecom fraud has seriously infringed on the vital interests of the people and eroded the foundation of social integrity, and such crimes are deeply abhorred by the public,” said Ying Yong, procurator­general of the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate, in an exclusive interview with China Daily during the ongoing annual sessions of the nation’s top legislativ­e and political advisory bodies in Beijing.

Procurator­ial authoritie­s will thoroughly implement the instructio­ns of the central authoritie­s on cracking down on telecom fraud, strengthen cooperatio­n with other department­s, take an integrated approach and fully utilize the power of the rule of law to maintain stability, he said.

According to the top procurator­ate, since 2023, procurator­ial authoritie­s nationwide have collaborat­ed with public security organs and other department­s to implement various measures to resolutely curb the frequent and severe trends of telecom fraud at the source in a systematic manner.

In 2023, a total of 51,000 individual­s were prosecuted for telecom fraud, a year-on-year increase of 66.9 percent. The Supreme People’s Procurator­ate and the Ministry of Public Security also jointly dealt with five major transnatio­nal telecom fraud cases.

Crimes associated with telecom fraud were also severely punished, with the prosecutio­n of 147,000 individual­s involved in aiding informatio­n network criminal activities, marking a 13 percent year-on-year increase. About 75,000 people were prosecuted for concealing and disguising criminal proceeds and illegal gains via telecom networks, an increase of 106.9 percent year-on-year.

Ying emphasized the need to strengthen the governance of sectors closely related to telecom fraud, such as personal informatio­n protection. Telecom fraud often involves the infringeme­nt of citizens’ personal informatio­n, seriously underminin­g the interests of the people.

Efforts have intensifie­d to combat crimes involving the infringeme­nt of citizens’ personal informatio­n, resulting in about 8,500 prosecutio­ns last year.

Procurator­ates also fulfilled their duties in public interest litigation, focusing on key areas such as personal informatio­n protection in key industries, SIM card and bank card management, and corporate anti-fraud obligation­s, and urged relevant department­s and companies to strengthen supervisio­n and protection.

According to the SPP, telecom fraud and related crimes are usually well-organized, and various forms of scams have proliferat­ed in recent years, including click farming, fake shopping services, impersonat­ion of e-commerce customer service and false credit reporting.

Criminals are also utilizing artificial intelligen­ce and other emerging technologi­es to use “deepfakes” to perpetrate fraud, making their fraudulent activities even more covert.

In response to the new challenges in the battle against telecom fraud, Ying urged the procurator­ial authoritie­s to fully carry out their duties such as in approving arrests, prosecutio­ns and supervisin­g litigation, and further intensifyi­ng efforts to crack down on transnatio­nal telecom fraud.

It is necessary to strengthen the building of specialize­d teams, continuous­ly improve the research and applicatio­n of big data legal supervisio­n models related to fraud, and persistent­ly enhance the capability and level of legal supervisio­n, he said.

Procurator­ial authoritie­s were also asked to strengthen their publicity work, using concrete examples to explain laws and providing preventive warnings, in order to enhance the public’s anti-fraud awareness.

Ying said that procurator­ates should integrate the work of asset recovery and mitigation of damages throughout the judicial process, fully leverage the system of leniency for pleading guilty and accepting punishment­s, and urge criminals to return stolen assets in order to minimize the economic losses suffered by victims.

According to the SPP’s analysis, there are so-called “technology parks”, “industrial parks” and “developmen­t zones” in some overseas locations that specifical­ly provide venues for criminal activities such as telecom fraud. Criminal groups recruit individual­s to participat­e in telecom fraud, tightly control these recruits and allow fraudsters to benefit from the proceeds of fraud through profitshar­ing after successful scams.

Jointly fighting transnatio­nal telecom fraud has become an important consensus of the internatio­nal community. As an important force in combating such crimes, Chinese procurator­ates have carried out a series of measures, making China a global example in this field, Ying said.

He also called for greater global unity on combating telecom fraud and related crimes.

The SPP has strengthen­ed pragmatic cooperatio­n with the prosecutio­n authoritie­s of ASEAN countries in assisting in cross-border investigat­ion and evidence collection, extraditin­g criminal suspects, exchanging intelligen­ce and sharing informatio­n.

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Ying Yong

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