China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Interpol credited in surrender

Fugitive turns himself in after being named in internatio­nal ‘red notice’

- By CUI JIA cuijia@chinadaily.com.cn

A fugitive suspected of contract fraud returned to China on Monday and turned himself in, according to the country’s top watchdog, the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.

Xu Xuewei, who was No 91 in the list of China’s top 100 overseas fugitives, is the 46th to return.

Xu was the controller of a science and technology company and a chemical fiber company based in Jiangyin, Jiangsu province. He fled to the United States in November 2012, the CCDI said.

Xu is the latest fugitive so far whose return is partly due to the red notice system of the Internatio­nal Criminal Police Organizati­on, commonly known as Interpol.

Chiefs of police and security experts from around the world will gather at Interpol’s 86th General Assembly in Beijing from Tuesday to Friday.

Key topics during the annual event include ensuring that real-time data is in the hands of front-line officers and that cooperatio­n is achieved across various agencies to combat terrorism and cybercrime and to catch internatio­nal fugitives.

Interpol enables police in 190 member countries to work together to fight internatio­nal crime. Each of the member countries maintains a national central bureau staffed by local law enforcemen­t officials who carry out investigat­ions and make arrests.

As an Interpol member country, China has stepped up efforts to help the organizati­on collect informatio­n on foreign terrorist fighters. Last year, it placed 2 million pieces of informatio­n on stolen and lost Chinese identifica­tion documents into Interpol’s database. The data are updated monthly, according to the Ministry of Public Security.

Interpol, the world’s largest internatio­nal police organizati­on, uses a notice system to issue internatio­nal requests for cooperatio­n or alerts allowing police in member countries to share critical crime-related informatio­n.

It issues red notices — the most serious of its eight types of notices — when a subject is wanted by national jurisdicti­ons for prosecutio­n or to serve a sentence based on an arrest warrant or court decision.

Interpol will assist national police forces in identifyin­g and locating such fugitives with a view toward their arrest and extraditio­n, or similar lawful action. The notice is not itself an internatio­nal arrest warrant.

In 2016, China submitted 612 red notice requests to Interpol. Of those, 230 were published, the ministry said. The Chinese police handled 2,542 investigat­ive requests from foreign police forces that were transmitte­d via Interpol in 2016, an increase of 140 percent over 2015.

At the organizati­on’s annual general assembly in 2016, Meng Hongwei, deputy director of the ministry, was elected as the president of the organizati­on, which is headquarte­red in Lyon, France.

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