The Borneo Post

China cracks down on pyramid scams after deaths

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BEIJING: China’s latest crackdown on pyramid schemes was prompted by three shocking deaths: one young man who was beaten, another who was found dead in a pond, a third left to die on a road.

Like elsewhere in the world, the scams have proliferat­ed in China as fraudsters trick people into thinking they can become rich quickly. Members are charged a joining fee and required to recruit new investors with promises of high returns.

But the three July deaths put a spotlight on more extreme tactics used by some organisati­ons in the world’s second largest economy, where the schemes can raise tens of billions of yuan.

Warning that pyramid schemes have become ‘more rampant’, four government agencies responded in August by launching a threemonth crackdown that targets misleading online job adverts designed to lure young people.

Many of those who sign up online to promises of easy riches discover a harsh reality in which they are faced with intense demands, harassment or even physical abuse.

Pyramid schemes in China were criminalis­ed in 2005 but are still booming, with authoritie­s investigat­ing more than 2,800 cases in 2016, a 20 per cent increase from 2015.

An official from the government’s anti- pyramid scheme department acknowledg­ed that there are ‘too many’ scams and investigat­ing them requires a lot of resources.

“Especially nowadays, many pyramid scheme organisati­ons move their base to the countrysid­e and develop members through the internet, making it harder to monitor them and obtain evidence,” the official said.

In a surprising additional challenge, hundreds of members of a pyramid scheme in July held a rare demonstrat­ion in Beijing to protest against an investigat­ion into their group, known as Shanxinhui or ‘philanthro­pic exchange’. Scores have been detained.

Many pyramid schemes operate in cramped spaces where people eat together and sleep on the floor, according to Li Xu, the founder of an organisati­on that rescues people who become trapped.

The organisati­ons that resort to violence do so to intimidate members into not reporting them to the police, he said, noting that the crackdowns have made it more difficult to recruit people.

“They are also afraid that newcomers will call the police. So they take away their mobile phone, control the newcomers by illegal detention and other violent means, in order keep more people,” he told AFP.

Li formed the China Anti-Pyramid Promotiona­l Associatio­n (CAPPA) after he was fooled into joining one himself more than a decade ago.

“Pyramid schemes in China target people who desire to change their life at a low cost,” he said.

He Linkun, however, came to a tragic end after disobeying his recruiters in northern Shanxi province.

After refusing to recruit people of his own, the 23-year-old was ‘beaten to death’, according to police. Three people were arrested.

In northern Tianjin, the body of Li Wenxing, a university student, was found in a pond.

Five people who confessed to depriving him of his ‘personal freedom’ were arrested, and the cause of death is under investigat­ion.

Another student, Zhang Chao, joined a different scheme in Tianjin on July 10.

Three days later, he was afflicted by heat stroke and members of the pyramid organisati­on decided to take him to a train station.

But when his condition worsened they abandoned him on a road, police said.

His body was found on July 14 and three people were arrested on charges of negligent homicide. — AFP

 ??  ?? This photo shows a website with informatio­n about investment schemes, on a screen at the China Anti-Pyramid Promotiona­l Associatio­n office in Beijing. — AFP photo
This photo shows a website with informatio­n about investment schemes, on a screen at the China Anti-Pyramid Promotiona­l Associatio­n office in Beijing. — AFP photo

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