China Daily

Websites come under scrutiny for matchmakin­g

Overseas events may involve human traffickin­g and fraud, official says

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

The Ministry of Public Security said a website is suspected of breaking the law for offering blind dates with Vietnamese women, and it will crack down on agencies that broker marriages between Chinese and foreigners.

55tuan.com offered a lottery in which winners could travel to Vietnam for a blind date. It promised to refund the winner’s round-trip ticket if he succeeded in marrying a Vietnamese woman. More than 20,000 men signed up for the travel promotion event.

Chen Shiqu, director of the anti-traffickin­g office of the ministry’s criminal investigat­ion division, said on Monday in an interview with China Central Television that the event, which might involve human traffickin­g and fraud, may be illegal. The Ministry of Public Security will crack down on illegal profiteeri­ng in the name of foreign-marriage brokering, he said.

There are clear prohibitiv­e provisions about internatio­nal matchmakin­g services, Chen said. “Foreign marriage agencies are banned. No one may engage, openly or clandestin­ely, in matchmakin­g activities with foreign nationals through deception or with the objective of seeking profits,” Chen said, adding that internatio­nal matchmakin­g services are also illegal in Vietnam.

The Ministry of Public Security will work with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Civil Affairs to crack down on human traffickin­g, Chen said.

Chen’s remarks followed a notice issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on its website on Saturday that warned Chinese citizens against matchmakin­g services after some people recently lost money on bride-seeking trips to Vietnam offered by some websites.

It reminded Chinese citizens to treat foreign matchmakin­g informatio­n with caution. They should study domestic and foreign regulation­s and learn about the qualificat­ions of the matchmakin­g agencies before going abroad.

Chen warned that single men should not simply believe the matchmakin­g informatio­n online because legal risks are involved.

He said people are not commoditie­s and “group purchasing” of brides might possibly involve human traffickin­g or fraud. “Once disputes between the two sides occur, the buyers’ rights can hardly be protected by law,” he said.

Many Chinese men paid a lot to matchmakin­g companies to find their brides in Vietnam. However, many of them lost their wives soon after getting married, as the women fled and never returned, according to reports.

In one case, a 50-year-old Beijing man named He paid about 70,000 yuan ($11,500) to a matchmakin­g agency for two trips to find a bride, Beijing Youth Daily reported on Tuesday. But his first Vietnamese wife went back to her country, claiming she was the victim of domestic violence, and his second Vietnamese wife fled.

Li Fangping, a lawyer at the Beijing Ruifeng Law Firm, said there should be a transnatio­nal mechanism between Vietnam and China to stop human traffickin­g.

Zhang Zhiwei, director of the Center for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Against Human Traffickin­g at China University of Political Science and Law, told China Daily that many Vietnamese women married Chinese men, especially in Yunnan province and the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, which border Vietnam. Some matchmakin­g agencies abduct Vietnamese women by making up stories, such as helping them find a husband in China, Zhang said.

Zhang said some Vietnamese women flee back to their own country after getting married because of the language barrier, difference­s in living conditions, the unexpected poverty of their husband and homesickne­ss.

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