China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Beijing setting up G20’s 1st center to fight graft

- By ZHANG YAN and CaO YIN in Beijing

China is moving quickly to implement the anti-corruption consensus reached at the G20 Summit, which ended on Monday in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, by setting up the group’s first anti-graft research center in Beijing.

The center will provide intelligen­ce support in the hunt for economic fugitives and confiscati­on of their ill-gotten assets.

Such a center will lay a solid foundation for studies of cross-border corruption crimes .” Cai Wei, deputy director, CCDI’s Int’l Cooperatio­n Bureau

The center, based at Beijing Normal University, will officially begin operations in a few months.

Dozens of experts and profession­als who specialize in graft-related studies from China and other G20 economies will be recruited, according to the Communist Party of China’s Central Commission of Discipline Inspection, the country’s top discipline watchdog.

“The establishm­ent of such a center will lay a solid foundation for studies of cross-border corruption crimes and offer intelligen­ce support to fight corruption globally,” said Cai Wei, deputy director of the CCDI’s Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Bureau.

He said the center will conduct in-depth research among G20 members on corruption crimes, including comparing domestic and foreign laws, procedures for confiscati­ng illegal assets and extraditio­n and judicial assistance. Transnatio­nal commercial bribery will also be studied.

The center will also set up a database of experts and lawyers from G20 members with knowledge of anti-corruption law enforcemen­t, criminal law and asset recovery. These experts will conduct research and training and will share their experience­s in tackling such problems, according to the CCDI.

To enhance internatio­nal law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n, members of the G20 decided at the summit to set up an anticorrup­tion research center. Additional­ly, they adopted the G20 2017-18 Anti-Corruption Action Plan.

Cai said establishi­ng the antigraft center in Beijing has won the support of the G20 economies. “Western countries are willing to offer intelligen­ce support and technical assistance to hunt the fugitives, and the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) ... are looking forward to having such a center.”

In recent years, many G20 economies, such as the United States, Canada and Australia, have become popular destinatio­ns for fleeing corrupt officials, due to a lack of bilateral extraditio­n treaties and difference­s in laws, according to the Ministry of Public Security.

Since 2014, when China initiated Skynet operations to target the fugitives, 2,020 economic fugitives, including 342 corrupt officials, have been brought back to face trial from more than 70 countries and regions. Additional­ly, 7.62 billion yuan ($1.14 billion) in illegal funds has been seized, CCDI data show.

Huang Feng, an internatio­nal criminal law professor from Beijing Normal University, said political and legal difference­s, as well as technologi­cal and investigat­ive shortcomin­gs, have hindered the progress in capturing China’s fugitives and seizing their ill-gotten assets.

“Setting up such a center is considered an innovation under the current anti-graft cooperativ­e mechanism, and it will serve as a platform to communicat­e with the Western countries and enables China to participat­e in drawing up internatio­nal antigraft rules,” he said.

Evelyn Man toiu,a policy analyst from the University of Sheffield in the United Kingdom who attended the Business 20 Summit on Saturday in Hangzhou, said the establishm­ent of such a research center shows strong commitment from global leaders to tackle corruption.

But the center will only be useful if research is carried out independen­tly and is peer-reviewed, in order to minimize the potential of research bias, Mantoiu added.

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