Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Former Interpol chief faces bribery charges

Meng latest official to fall in President Xi’s antigraft campaign

- Sutirtho Patranobis letters@hindustant­imes.com

BEIJING: Meng Hongwei, the former Interpol chief, is under investigat­ion for taking bribes, China’s ministry of public security (MPS) said on Monday, becoming the latest top official to fall in President Xi Jinping’s crackdown on corruption.

Meng, who is also the viceminist­er in MPS, was arrested last month after reaching China from Lyon, the Interpol’s global headquarte­rs in France. The discipline inspection department of the Communist Party of China (CPC) on Sunday released a one-line statement to say that Meng was under investigat­ion. The Interpol announced soon after that Meng had resigned.

“The investigat­ion against Meng Hongwei’s taking and giving bribes and suspected violations of law is very timely, absolutely correct and rather wise,” said the MPS statement after an internal meeting.

The ministry will “unswerving­ly promote constructi­on of party conduct, honest governance and fight corruption,” said the statement signed by Zhao Kezhi, member of CPC’s elite Politburo standing committee and minister for public security. Meng, 64, was appointed the world police organisati­on’s chief in 2016 and was possibly the most high-profile Chinese appointee in an internatio­nal organisati­on.

He and his family had moved to Lyon soon after the appointmen­t. His wife, Grace Meng reported him missing over the weekend, saying she had not heard from her husband since September 25.

It is rare for the family of a high-profile corruption suspect in China to go public about the case.Beijing’s decision to arrest a high-profile official on a posting abroad could be an indication that the stakes in this particular case are high.

The CPC was willing to risk the embarrassm­ent and media attention Meng’s arrest would create.

“China’s leaders have long recognised corruption as the greatest threat to the CPC’s legitimacy and sustainabi­lity. After taking office as CPC general secretary in November 2012, President Jinping vowed to institutio­nalise the CPC’s ongoing anti-corruption efforts and called for strengthen­ed laws to punish and prevent corruption,” Jamie P. Horsley from the Paul Tsai China Centre and a Visiting Lecturer in Law at Yale Law School wrote for The Diplomat earlier this year.

“After five years of an anticorrup­tion campaign that investigat­ed more than 2.7 million officials, punished more than 1,5 million and criminally tried 58,000, Xi pressed for reform of the supervisio­n system effectivel­y constrain the power of public servants ‘in a cage of regulation­s’ under CCP leadership,” Horsley wrote.

During Meng’s tenure, Interpol issued a red notice for fugitive Guo Wengui, who threatened to reveal corruption at the country’s highest levels and is accused by Chinese authoritie­s of money laundering

 ?? AP FILE ?? Former Interpol president Meng Hongwei during his address at the Interpol World Congress.
AP FILE Former Interpol president Meng Hongwei during his address at the Interpol World Congress.

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