The Borneo Post

China says three of most wanted graft suspects let off

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BEIJING: Three people on China’s list of 100 most wanted graft suspects overseas were not prosecuted when they finally returned to China, the government has said in an update on the cases of 40 people on the list it has had returned.

China has pursued an overseas search, dubbed ‘Operation Fox Hunt’, for corrupt officials and business executives who have fled abroad with their assets, part of President Xi Jinping’s war on deep-seated corruption.

In 2015, authoritie­s published a list of 100 of the most wanted corruption suspects who had been targeted with an Interpol red notice, many living in the United States, Canada and Australia.

An update released by the graftbusti­ng Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said 15 of the 40 returnees had already been sentenced to terms of up to life in prison. Some came back voluntaril­y, while others were extradited. However, three people were let off after returning to China.

The commission said Zhang Dawei was exempted from prosecutio­n in November 2016 because he had confessed his crime and returned all his illegal gains voluntaril­y.

Two others, Zhu Zhenyu and Zhang Liping, were spared prosecutio­n because Zhu was an accessory to the crime and turned himself in voluntaril­y, while Zhang’s offence of falsifying valueadded tax invoices was judged too minor, it said.

The handling of these cases reflects China’s policy of offering leniency to those who voluntaril­y return while giving harsh penalties for those who are brought to justice after being arrested, the commission said.

The case of the person who topped the list of 100, Yang Xiuzhu, was listed among a group of 13 people described as having their cases still under investigat­ion or awaiting review.

Yang, a former deputy director of the constructi­on bureau in the southeaste­rn city of Wenzhou, ended 13 years on the run by returning from the United States last November. — Reuters

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