The Peterborough Examiner

Interpol president reported missing during trip to China

- ELAINE GANLEY AND CHRISTOPHE­R BODEEN

PARIS — He left his home in Lyon, France, for a visit to his homeland, and then vanished — putting the Internatio­nal Criminal Police Organizati­on, best known as Interpol, at the centre of its own missing persons case.

Meng Hongwei, Interpol’s president, boarded a plane and arrived in China, according to a French judicial official. But then, nothing. His wife, who put out a call on Friday, said she hasn’t heard from her 64-year-old husband since the end of September, the official said.

To make matters murkier, Meng is not just the head of Interpol: He’s also a vice minister for public safety in China.

Interpol, based in Lyon, would say only that reports that its president is missing is “a matter for the relevant authoritie­s in both France and China.”

France launched its own investigat­ion on Friday morning, according to the judicial official who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly and asked for anonymity.

Whether China was taking action was unknown. But the South China Morning Post, a Hong Kong newspaper, hinted that Meng may have been the latest target of an ongoing campaign against corruption in China.

The newspaper said that upon landing last week Meng was “taken away” for questionin­g by what it said were “discipline authoritie­s.” The term usually describes investigat­ors in the ruling Communist party who probe graft and political disloyalty. The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the party’s secretive internal investigat­ion agency, had no announceme­nts on its website about Meng and could not be reached for comment.

Meng is the first from his country to serve as Interpol’s president, a post that is largely symbolic but powerful in status and not without political weight. But because Interpol’s secretary general is responsibl­e for the day-to-day running of the police agency’s operations, Meng’s absence may have little operationa­l effect.

The organizati­on links up police officials of its 192 member states, who can use Interpol to disseminat­e their search for a fugitive, or a missing person. Only at the behest of a country does the informatio­n go public via a “red notice,” the closest thing to an internatio­nal arrest warrant. “Yellow notices” are issued for missing persons.

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